ESAHomeAstronautsInternational Space StationResearchEducationExploration
   
How to become an astronaut
Living in space
European astronauts
European Astronaut Centre
Astronaut training
Services
CalendarSubscribeRSS feeds
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
News printer friendly page
Marco Polo crew on board the ISS
Six crew members on the ISS join the inflight call
Day 6: Inflight call with EC President Prodi
 
30 April 2002
ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori started day 6 of the Marco Polo mission with a televised link-up with Brussels, where he talked to European Commission President Romano Prodi and ESA Director General Antonio Rodotà.
 
All six crew members on board the ISS smiled and waved to the audience. EC President, Romano Prodi, asked the Marco Polo crew how the mission was going so far, to which Roberto’s Soyuz Commander, Yuri Gidzenko, replied, “We have a lot of things to do. The experiments are going well, everything is going according to schedule”.  
 
Marco Polo crew on board the ISS
The Marco Polo crew talk to Brussels
Mr Rodotà commented on how ESA, as one of five partners, has contributed to the International Space Station for several years. He then asked Roberto how he has found living and working on board. Roberto replied, “I am impressed with the technology on the Space Station. I know this is the result of years of work by engineers from all over the world and also from Europe. ESA’s contribution is huge – it is very evident on the Station here today”. He continued, “I am very very excited about working here. Everyday there is something new to learn, it is an unbelievable experience”.

Roberto also spoke with a group of school children in Rome, hosted by ESA astronaut Umberto Guidoni, the first European to visit the ISS back in April 2001, and ASI.
 
 
TM-34
A view of the TM-34 Soyuz from the window of the ISS
Roberto showed the children the Soyuz spacecraft in which he arrived. The TM-34 will be attached to the Station for the next six months as a lifeboat for the Expedition crew. He and his crew mates, Soyuz commander Gidzenko and the South African Shuttleworth, will return in the ‘old’ Soyuz, currently attached to another docking port.

After his well-earned breakfast Roberto then carried on with the day’s programme of experiments, mainly focussing on the VEST operational test of new clothing materials and the CHIRO handgrip experiment.
 
 
Another pass over Italy gave Roberto a chance to take some more photographs of his home country.

Work on board the ISS is also proceeding smoothly for the Expedition 4 crew who today spent their 146th day in space. The core of the Space Station will have circled the Earth more than 20000 times by the time the next permanent crew, Expedition 5, replaces them at the beginning of June.
 
 

 
 
Mission reports
Days 9 & 10: Final preparations for return to EarthDay 8: Nelson Mandela calls the Space StationDay 7: Starting preparations for returnDay 5: Experiments continueDay 4: First full day on the ISSDay 3: Docking and ingressDay 2: Chasing the ISS in orbitLaunch day: Thursday 25 April 2002Pre-launch photo report
Related articles
Successful lift-off for Italian on first mission into space
Related links
Vittori's missionvideo  Marco Polo mission videos
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2012 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.