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Soyuz space rocket blasts off
BAIKONUR (Kazakhstan)—A Soyuz rocket blasted off from the Baikonur space
centre in Kazakhstan, taking American “space tourist” Greg Olsen and his
fellow astronauts off towards the International Space Station. The
rocket climbed faultlessly away from the Kazakh steppes carrying the
Soyuz TMA-7 capsule and its fee-paying and professional crew. Ten
minutes later the capsule was placed in orbit, to the applause of the
hundreds of people, including Olsen’s family, crowded into an
observation post within sight of the launching pad.
On Friday, 59-year-old grandfather Olsen confessed to a few pre-launch
nerves ahead of his 20 million-dollar trip, the fulfillment of months of
tough preparation. “I’ll be most relaxed and happy after the rocket
takes off,” said Olsen, speaking at the Baikonur space centre ahead of
his launch. Olsen was accompanied by Russian cosmonaut Valery Tokarev
and US astronaut William McArthur on the trip to the ISS, where they
will arrive on Monday, after a period in orbit adjusting to conditions
of weightlessness. Two other “space tourists” have preceded Olsen in
what is becoming a profitable sideline for the Russian space programme:
American Dennis Tito in 2001 and South African Mark Shuttleworth in
2002. Despite the hefty price-tag, Olsen can expect few creature
comforts aboard the Soyuz, a low-frills workhorse, or the space station.
He has also insisted there is a work component to his sojourn, as he
plans to test out equipment developed by his company, a New Jersey-based
firm that makes electronic sensors for military and civilian
use.—Agencies |