The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on Wednesday on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on the Indian Standards Time (IST) on Wednesday, and is moving towards the international space station.
The Dragon is also carrying the X-4 commander Paigi Whitson, and Mission expert Slavose Slavose Ujnanski-Visnivsky and Tibor Kapu, and it will reach the space-wine port of the Indian time at 4:30 pm today at 4:30 pm.
NASA flight engineers Anne McClane and Nicole Aarce will be on duty at the beginning of their shift, monitoring the dragon during the automatic access and meeting. After Docking, the X-4 astronaut will greet seven croomets of the Expedition 73, call on Earth for a welcome speech, then participate in the security briefing with the residents of the station.
Meanwhile, McClane and Airters worked with the rest of the station employees in general shift on Wednesday and continued to work for microgravity research and laboratory maintenance. It will be a chance to fly like his fellow wing commander Rakesh Sharma of the Indian Air Force, who flew on Soviet Intercosmoses on 3 April 1984 under the Soviet Intercosmos program. Sharma spent seven days in space at Salute 7 Space Station.
In his address on the dragon spacecraft, Shukla said, “Hello, my dear countrymen, what is the journey. We are back in space once again after 41 years. It is a wonderful journey. We are revolving around the earth at a speed of 7.5 kilometers per second. The tricolor that emerged on my shoulders tell me that I am not with you all. It is the beginning of the human space program. I want to be a part of this journey.
Once established in space, astronauts are planning to spend up to 14 days in the circumambulation laboratory, where they will conduct a mission that will include science, outreach and commercial activities.
This will be the highest research and science activities on the Ex -Space Mission at the International Space Station.
NASA and ISRO (Indian Space Research Organization) are collaborating to start several scientific investigations. These studies include muscle regeneration, sprouts and growth of food microscopic algae, the existence of small aquatic organisms and the examination of human contact with electronic displays in micro gravity. The first private astronaut for the station left for the 17-day mission at the Parikrama Laboratory in April 2022, Axiom Mission 1, April 2022.