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Watch NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara and 2 cosmonauts launch to the ISS on a Russian rocket today

Watch NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara and 2 cosmonauts launch to the ISS on a Russian rocket today_650483c87c003.jpeg

A NASA astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts will launch to space later today (Sept. 15), and you can watch live.

NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara, alongside Russian counterparts Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub, will launch aboard a Soyuz spacecraft to the International Space Station. Launch is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. EDT (1530 GMT or 8:30 p.m. local time at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.)

You can watch the launch live here at Space.com, courtesy of NASA Television. Coverage starts about 45 minutes before launch. The crew will then make one of the fastest-ever trips to the ISS, potentially arriving as soon as 2:56 p.m. EDT (1856 GMT). We will also carry that coverage live, from NASA. Hatch opening will follow around 4:45 p.m. EDT (2045 GMT) as the Soyuz astronauts join the Expedition 69 crew already on station.

Related: NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara ready for Soyuz launch to relieve delayed crew in space

Expedition 69-70 astronauts at a press conference in Russia on Sept. 20, 2022 ahead of the Expedition 68 launch. From left: Loral O’Hara of NASA, Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos, and Nikolai Chub of Roscosmos. The crew is behind glass due to quarantine requirements ahead of a launch; they were serving as backup for Expedition 68 astronauts. (Image credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls)

The trio will launch aboard the MS-24 spacecraft as a relief crew for NASA astronaut Frank Rubio and Roscosmos‘ Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin. Rubio and his colleagues were already scheduled for a six-month mission, which was delayed to a year following a leak in their own Soyuz spacecraft (MS-22) in December 2022.

The agencies eventually decided to rapidly send up an empty replacement vehicle, MS-23, which safely arrived in February. But prior to the leak, MS-23 was supposed to hold O’Hara and her relief crew, who were still in training at the time of its faster-than-expected launch. For Rubio and his crewmates, coming home required an even longer wait until the new MS-24 and O’Hara’s crew would be ready this month to relieve them.

In the meantime, Rubio, Prokopyev and Petelin unintentionally set records. At an expected 371 days in space (assuming a Sept. 27 landing), they are the first crew to spend more than a year on the ISS. And only four people have spent longer in space than that, all cosmonauts who visited the Soviet-era Mir space station for as long as 427 days.

NASA has emphasized the importance of having backup vehicles in case of emergencies like this. The agency had a backup plan to bring Rubio home in an already docked SpaceX Dragon vehicle (putting Rubio in a temporary seat installed below four seats already occupied by other astronauts); Rubio’s Russian crewmates would have taken the broken Soyuz, as two humans would not heat up the spacecraft as rapidly as three. But that scenario was not required after MS-23 arrived.

NASA and the Russians regularly exchange astronauts to fly on each other’s vehicles; O’Hara’s was part of a set of four announced in mid-2022.

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