Now everyone is together. The three astronauts and one cosmonaut of SpaceX Mission to the crew-10 Nailed with The International Space Station immediately after midnight, and at 1:35 pm, opened the openings between the spacecraft of the space dragon and the ISS, the meeting with the crew already there.
NASA's astronauts, Anna McClane and Nicole Ayers, Japan Air Research Agency, Astronaut Takuja Onishi, and Roskosmos Cosmonaut Kiril Peskov were welcomed by the 72 crew, including astronauts, NASA NASA, “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmmsmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, as well as “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rososmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “Rosmosmos”, “R Alexei Ovivin and Ivan Wagner.
The lift went smoothly at 19:03 ET on Friday when the Falcon 9 rocket raised the endurance of the spacecraft of the dragon in space.
Read more: NASA's “strained” astronauts these days away from coming home
Watch this: Watch the NASA SpaceX crew's plugin with the International Space Station
Returning to “stuck” astronauts
The crew-10 has a little more driving on it than a typical mission of rotating the crew. Williams and Wilmore It became long -term inhabitants of the ISS after driving at the Starliner crew's test mission station. The crew capsule encountered technical problems and was returned to Earth without astronauts.
Williams and Wilmore ISS remain unexpectedly stretched for more than eight months. The arrival of the crew-10 means that Vilms, Wilmore, NASA astronaut, Nick Hague and Roskosmos Cosmonaut Alexander Gorbunov will be able to hand over the duties to the newcomers and return to Earth of A. SpaceX Dragon sent in September. That dragon arrived with two open places for the Starliner's crew.
With a successful launch and docking, crew members, including many delayed Williams and Wilmore, will leave the space station no earlier than Wednesday, March 19, depending on the time of the spraying locations off the coast of Florida.
Both Williams and Wilmore have insisted they do not feel stuck, though that term has been widely applied to them in the news and social media.
Watch this: NASA SpaceX crew launch: A mission to return captive astronauts begins