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|  |  |  |  | | | |  | Frank De Winne on board ISS during an inflight call with his family and friends | | Odissea Mission crew enters International Space Station
1 November 2002 The Soyuz TMA-1 spacecraft, carrying ESA astronaut Frank De Winne and his two Russian colleagues, docked successfully with the International Space Station (ISS) shortly after 06:00 CET. At 07:26 CET, following hatch opening, the Odissea crew entered ISS to a warm welcome from the Expedition 5 crew. Docking of the Soyuz TMA-1 was performed without any manual intervention and was filmed from ISS using a camera mounted on the Canadarm. Before the new arrivals could enter the ISS, both the Soyuz crew and the ISS crew checked that the connection between the spacecraft was airtight.
|  | Odissea mission crew going up to the TMA Soyuz capsule , Baikonour, 30th October 2002 | | At 07:26 CET the hatches between the spacecraft were opened and the Odissea Mission crew entered ISS. First to enter was Russian Soyuz commander Sergei Zaletin, followed by Flight Engineers Frank De Winne and Yuri Lonchakov.
Immediately after arrival, during a call to the Mission Control room in Moscow, the crew was congratulated on the success of their mission so far by two Belgian ministers Mr Picqué and Mr Ylieff and ESA Directors Mr Feustel-Buechl and Mr Poncelet.
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|  | Related articles ESA’s Belgian astronaut on way to Space Station in new Soyuz spacecraftESA’s Belgian astronaut ready for Space Station missionFrank De Winne's Odissea mission diary: On board ‘my' spacecraftRelated links Odissea missionFrank De WinneOdissea's FAQHuman Spaceflight and Exploration
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