Science & Technology

Russia’s Progress MS-14 docks on ISS setting new speed record

(Update 1: Changes headline, reledes, adds detail of spacecraft docking on ISS)

Moscow, Apr 25 (efe-epa).- Russia’s Progress MS-14 space freighter successfully docked on the International Space Station on Saturday morning and set a new record making it the fastest journey to the station in history, director-general of Roscosmos said.

“The flight lasted 3 hours and 20 minutes. This is the best result in the entire history of space flight,” Dmitry Rogozin said on Twitter.

According to the Russian space corporation, the previous record was set by the Progress MS-12 freighter, which in 2019 took an extra 30 seconds to reach the ISS.

Progress took off at 01. 51 GMT, as scheduled, according to the Russian Flight Control Center, which added that “the flight is proceeding normally.”

The flight was carried out on the so-called super-fast two-lap trajectory and the Progress 75 cargo ship docked at 1. 12 a.m. EDT to the Zvezda Service Module on the Russian segment of the station, just over three hours after blasting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

The freighter was received at the station by Russian cosmonauts Anatoli Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner, and NASA astronaut Christopher Cassidy, who arrived at the ISS aboard the manned spacecraft Soyuz MS-16 on 9 April.

The Soyuz-2.1a carrier rocket arrived with about two tons of cargo for the ISS crew including 420 kilograms of water, 46 kg of oxygen, 700 kg of fuel, 1.5 tons of water, 1,350 kg of dry cargo, scientific equipment, food and medicine.

Roscosmos took the rare decision naming the Soyuz spacecraft Victory rocket.

The move comes as part of Russia’s commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany towards the end of World War II in May 1945.

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