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All information in the ticker: After several delays - the German astronaut should finally fly into space today

2021-11-10T20:55:59.233Z


Matthias Maurer had to be patient for a long time, but now it should finally start for the German astronaut. All the news about the ISS launch in our ticker.


Matthias Maurer had to be patient for a long time, but now it should finally start for the German astronaut.

All the news about the ISS launch in our ticker.

  • The German astronaut Matthias Maurer flies with colleagues from NASA to the ISS.

  • The trip had to be postponed several times due to several incidents.

  • With our news ticker you will stay informed about all further developments.

Update from November 10th, 9:26 p.m .:

The German astronaut Matthias Maurer is supposed to take off from the Kennedy Space Center in the US state of Florida to the international space station ISS on Thursday night (03:03 a.m. CET, Wednesday 9:03 p.m. local time). The 51-year-old is flying into space with three astronauts from the US space agency NASA on board a SpaceX space capsule that will dock with the ISS after a 22-hour flight. The start has been postponed several times.

As an astronaut for the European Space Agency (ESA), Maurer will stay on the ISS for six months for his first space mission “Cosmic Kiss”, where he will oversee more than a hundred scientific experiments, 36 of which were developed in Germany. He is the second German in the European astronaut corps after Alexander Gerst and the twelfth German in space overall. He is scheduled to return from his mission to Earth in April 2022.

Update from November 10th, 4:46 p.m.:

After numerous postponements, the US space agency NASA has been optimistic about a start of the German astronaut Matthias Maurer to the International Space Station ISS on Thursday.

The weather looks good, said NASA manager Steve Stich at a press conference on Tuesday (local time).

“The crew is healthy and excited and ready to take off,” added his colleague Joel Montalbano. 

All information in the ticker: After several delays - the German astronaut should finally fly into space today

First report from November 10, 2021:

Cape Canaveral - First the weather was bad, then there was a "minor medical problem" with one of the crew members and finally the return of another crew was preferred: the German astronaut Matthias Maurer had to be patient for around ten days and be in quarantine on Hold out the Cape Canaveral spaceport in the US state of Florida - but on Thursday morning (November 11th), after many postponements, it should finally take off for the International Space Station ISS and become the twelfth German in space.

Together with his NASA colleagues Thomas Marshburn, Raja Chari and Kayla Barron - the so-called "Crew-3" - the 51-year-old Saarland native is to take off from Cape Canaveral in a "Crew Dragon" from Elon Musk's private space company SpaceX and fly to the ISS .

For the first time since Alexander Gerst's flight in 2018, a German would be in space again.

Maurer would be the fourth German on the ISS - and the first to fly there in a “Crew Dragon”.

Matthias Maurer before flight into space: Predecessor Alexander Gerst offers help

ISS predecessor Gerst keeps his fingers crossed for him on site in Cape Canaveral.

“When a friend and colleague flies, that's great, you see it from another side.

Matthias always supported me during my missions and now I'm here and can help him a little. "

The four astronauts recorded the postponements professionally and were still highly concentrated, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) kept saying.

For the planners of the experiments on the ISS, however, the many shifts are a major challenge, said Volker Schmid, who is responsible for the mission at the German Space Agency at DLR.

"You will have to reschedule something - but we will try to fit everything that was planned into the mission," he told the German Press Agency in Cape Canaveral.

Some things might be postponed to the next mission.

“In two to three weeks we will have a better overview of everything,” announced Schmid.

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Matthias Maurer: Safety is the most important issue

The fact that only a three-person crew is on duty on the ISS for a short time until the arrival of the mason crew also has an effect.

“With a three-person crew, of course, less science can be done overall.

Because about two members are needed for so-called station keeping, ”emphasized Schmid.

"There is then less science planned for a few days before and after." The current crew will try to work through the projects.

At a time when space tourism is often talked about, the shifts would also show that space travel is dependent on many parameters such as weather, technology and health and is even more complex than, for example, aviation.

“It is absolutely right to bet on security.

Carelessness can have fatal consequences. "

Space-X: Spaceship should have left in October

Originally, the “Falcon 9” launcher with the “Crew Dragon” spaceship was supposed to take off at the end of October.

But then it was time to wait.

For some astronauts it feels like an eternity - others have more patience.

The scientist Matthias Sutter advised the crew around Maurer to concentrate on another activity in the meantime.

"I'm sure that all four won't have to wait for something for the first time in their lives," said the behavioral scientist and book author ("The Discovery of Patience").

Everyone has a certain routine of dealing with delays.

“Similar to ski racers at the start when there is an interruption.

Some hide in a corner, others chat with their service people until things continue, ”said the director at the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods in Bonn.

ISS: Astronauts have to carry out over 100 experiments

On the ISS, Maurer will carry out numerous experiments over a period of around six months at an altitude of around 400 kilometers and will also complete an outdoor assignment.

"With between 100 and 150 experiments that we then carry out, there is a certain expectation," said the astronaut.

“I'll do my best to really get the best results.” Maurer has “a lot of experiments and work,” said the head of the European Space Agency (Esa), the Austrian Josef Aschbacher.

"His day will be full and his six months will go by pretty quickly, but it's a really great mission."

At 51, Maurer is the oldest German spaceman on a maiden flight.

The man with a doctorate in materials science left more than 8,000 candidates behind after his application to the European space agency Esa and trained for years for the journey into weightlessness.

Matthias Maurer: “Tote Hosen” also keep their fingers crossed

Maurer also takes greetings from prominent musicians with him on the flight.

"Die Toten Hosen wish Matthias Maurer the best of luck on his trip!" The Düsseldorf band told the German Press Agency.

The background to this is the astronaut's choice of music: Maurer had announced that on the way to the rocket he would hear, among other things, the song “Days like this” by Die Toten Hosen.

Until the start, the astronaut is still looking forward to it.

"I've dreamed of reaching the top and just enjoying the view of our beautiful planet for a very long time," said the astronaut.

“The first thing I want to do in a free moment is to float into our space window and do a complete lap around the world, that's 90 minutes, just to soak in myself and just feel what it means outside of ours To float planets and to see our planet hanging there in front of the black of the universe. "

(Dpa)

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-11-10

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