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Fri, Nov 11, 2005

ISS Gets A Boost

A Little Higher... Higher... That's Good!

The International Space Station is now orbiting the earth nearly five miles higher than before, after astronaut Bill McArthur and cosmonaut Valery Tokarev used the station's M-54 escape ship as a booster rocket (remember Arthur C. Clarke's "2010"?) and fired the pod's engines while it was docked to the space station.

The maneuver, overseen by Russian Mission Control, moved the station 4.8 miles higher in its orbit, raising its orbital apogee to about 220 miles above the earth. The move serves to both extend the station's orbital life, as well as putting the station on the correct trajectory to meet next month's scheduled arrival of a Progress cargo ship due to liftoff Dec. 21.

The orbital correction was to have taken place last month, but there was a glitch in the M-54's engines that forced the delay.

FMI: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html

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