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Friday, November 21, 2014

International Space Station(ISS) to have two women on board for the first time in years

The International Space Station will have its most female-heavy crew in years as when Italy's first female astronaut joins the vessel this weekend.

Samantha Cristoforetti(37)will launch into space from a facility in Kazakhstan this Sunday Nov 23,2014, where she will join Russian Elena Serova, who has been in orbit since September.
Samantha Cristoforetti was a highly-decorated military pilot before she joined the European Space Agency
Proud: Cristoforetti, 37, was a highly-decorated military pilot before she joined the European Space Agency


It will only be the second time that two women have been on board the ISS at once, making the six-member crew one third female.
Space-bound: Samantha Cristoforetti, posing above with the spacesuit she will wear, is Italy's first female astronaut

Russian Soyuz-FG booster rocket, pictured above at its launchpad in Kazakhstan
That's my ride: Cristoforetti, and her espresso machine, will be carried into space by a Russian Soyuz-FG booster rocket, pictured above at its launchpad in Kazakhstan


Samantha Cristoforettis arrival will also bring a new first to space, as she will bring a specially-designed Italian espresso machine along with her.
The so-called ISSpresso machine, which weighs 44lbs, is designed to work in zero gravity, and will be the first device of its kind outside the earth's atmosphere

Samantha Cristoforetti is the first woman assigned to a lengthy space station mission by the European Space Agency, which recently masterminded the Philae rover landing on a comet.

Elena Serova is one of only four Russian women to fly in space and the first to live at this space station. It was 1963 when Russia launched the world's first spacewoman, Valentina Tereshkova, beating America by two full decades, and 1984 when it flew the first world's female spacewalker, Svetlana Savitskaya
Companion: Elena Serova, a Russian, is already in orbit on the International Space Station. Cristoforetti's arrival will make the crew more women-heavy than it has been since 2010

Both Elena Serova and Samantha Cristoforetti will spend six months aboard the 260-mile-high complex, following in the footsteps of nine America women who logged lengthy stays



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