Soyuz MS-13 relocation from Zvezda to Poisk

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The Soyuz MS-13 spacecraft was undocked from the aft port of the Zvezda Service Module on 26 August 2019, at 03:34 UTC (25 August, 23:34 EDT), and manually docked to the Poisk module of the International Space Station at 03:59 UTC (25 August, 23:59 EDT) by cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov of Roscosmos, joined by astronauts Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency and Drew Morgan of NASA. The relocation of Soyuz MS-13 was executed to allow the unpiloted Soyuz MS-14 to automatically dock to the Zvezda Service Module.

Credit: NASA/Roscosmos
#SoyuzMS13 #СоюзМС13
Soyuz MS-13 undocking and docking to the ISS
Расстыковка Союз МС-13 и стыковка с МКС
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I have always been fascinated by space and all that goes on. This is great! Keep up the good works.

theramblingsoflarry
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Awesome real-life space manoveur!! Humans kicking butt once again.

WillArtie
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Александр Александрович Скворцов . Космонавт-испытатель Роскосмоса. Русский лётчик !!!

АннаАникина-ыъ
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Who parked in my spot? Would you mind moving your vehicle please? :-)

worldofrandometry
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Really great view all the way through this one. It's cool to see the SSVP mechanism at work too. But are we all just going to pretend that Robonaut didn't wake up to sabotage the Kurs system because he doesn't want Skybot coming on the ISS?

SimplySpace
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Everyone, please read the description before asking the same question repeatedly. Thank you and have a great day.

bobbobful
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I was going to ask about all three being aboard, given two Soyuz are currently docked, but there are six aboard right now, and if something happened requiring returning to Earth that would put the station escape capabilities overcapacity if less than three were aboard the Soyuz.

TWX
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good to see these modules move in space all alone..

zoqxsa
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Браво, Роскосмос. Серьёзно, сначала создадим трудности, а потом их героически преодалеем

EdikLevin
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wow...I am in awe at what I have just seen actually happen...for those in the know...has this ever been done before? and considering how agonizingly slow these maneuvers usually are, was this real time or was the video sped up here and there?

fslcdlt
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Hope to see Russia on the moon. From your friends in Philippines

leticialachica
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Sheldon: your in my spot, you park on my spot leonerd he park on my spot

armanboncales
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I guess the soyuz has enough spare thruster fuel for this extra unplanned moving

maicod
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So this sensor which malfunctioned, is located on the ISS itself?

nomayor
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0:59.. god dammit... I thought nasa used metric system from a while.

luiseduardo
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I am watching this again, thanks everyone for your clarifications to my other comment/question. That it can just stop in front of the ISS as it does at 10:00', while both the ISS and the Soyuz move at the ISS orbital speed which is 7.66km/sec, or 27, 600 km/h, or 17, 100 mph, is beyond my comprehension.
Some more questions: a) Does the ISS have lights which illuminate the Soyuz for the cameras? It can't be light from the sun, as they describe how it moves around the globe. b) Given that the ISS and the Soyuz have significant different mass, how can they have stayed for two days so close, flying at the same distance from the Earth and at the same speed? I would have thought that the gravitational pull equation doesn't allow for that, the object with the smaller mass should either be farther away from the earth, or moving faster, otherwise gravity would have pulled it back to earth?

nomayor
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What part of the Soyuz where they in to move it. The orbital part or the descent part?

andrewpast
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They had the best opportunity to check the (assumed) faulty sensor.
I wonder whether they did it.

MMachine
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Это что дядя Фёдор прилетел ?или что это?

rusan
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Американская тетка разговаривает с прищепкой на носу

Artem_.
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