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Soyuz MS-24 delivers crew to ISS

Soyuz MS-24, launched on Sept. 15, 2023, was the first and only Russian mission of that year that delivered three crew members to the International Space Station on Sept. 15, 2023. The successful docking with the outpost on the day of the launch also relieved the three members of Expedition 69, who stayed in orbit for a year due to a failure of the thermal control system aboard Soyuz MS-22 in December 2022, which forced it to land without a crew. On its way back to Earth on April 6, 2024, Soyuz MS-24 returned a US astronaut, who originally rode it to orbit, as well as Russian and Belorussian short-term visitors delivered to the station on Soyuz MS-25.

Previous mission: Soyuz MS-23


launch

Soyuz MS-24 mission at a glance:

Spacecraft designation Soyuz MS-24 (No. 755), ISS mission 70S
Launch vehicle Soyuz-2-1a 14S53 No. M15000-061
Payload fairing (SZB) 11S517A3.1000A1-0 No. M15000-100
Spacecraft mass ~7,152 kilograms
Launch Site Baikonur, Site 31, Pad No. 6
Launch date and time 2023 Sept. 15, 18:44:35.417 Moscow Time (actual)
Docking date and time 2023 Sept. 15, 21:53:32 Moscow Time (actual)
Docking destination ISS, Rassvet module (MIM1), nadir port
Flight duration (planned) 204 days (actual); around 180 days (planned)
Landing date 2024 April 6, 10:17:36 Moscow Time (planned)
Crew at launch Oleg Kononenko, Nikolai Chub, Loral O'Hara
Crew at landing Oleg Novitsky, Marina Vasilevskaya, Loral O'Hara
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Changing crews and flight plans

One of the three crew members aboard Soyuz MS-24 was initially expected to be a guest cosmonaut from Belarus, who would return to Earth with the crew of Soyuz MS-23 after a short visit to the station. In the meantime, the guest's return seat aboard Soyuz MS-24 in early 2024 would be occupied by one member of the original Soyuz MS-23 crew who would stay on the station for two long-duration shifts lasting around a year.

According to Roskosmos, on June 14, 2022, the National Academy of Belarus submitted 29 candidates to Roskosmos for the guest-cosmonaut selection after screening more than 100 applicants. Two finalists expected to be females serving as a primary candidate and a backup. They were scheduled to be selected early in 2023.

By January 2023, Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub, originally slated to launch aboard Soyuz MS-23, were re-assigned to the Soyuz MS-24 mission, due to the need to use their original spacecraft as a replacement vehicle for Soyuz MS-22, which was damaged by a coolant leak in December 2022. In turn, the flight of a guest cosmonaut from Belarus was shifted from Soyuz MS-24 to the follow-on Soyuz mission in 2024. US astronaut Loral O'Hara joined Kononenko and Chub on the Soyuz MS-24 crew. For Kononenko, it would be the fifth orbital space flight, while Chub and O'Hara would be flying for the first time.

On Aug. 15, 2023, the Chief Medical Commission at the Cosmonaut Training Center recommended the removal of Oleg Platonov from the backup crew of Soyuz MS-24 and Expeditions 70 and 71. As a result, Aleksei Ovchinin was left as a backup to both Russian members of the Soyuz MS-24 crew.

On Feb. 1, 2023, Roskosmos announced that two Soyuz-2-1a rockets for launching Progress MS-23 and Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft had been shipped from the manufacturing site at RKTs Progress in Samara to the Baikonur launch site.

In early March 2023, plans surfaced to advance the launch of Soyuz MS-24 from September 15 to June 7, 2023, probably in order to provide an earlier landing of the Soyuz MS-23 spacecraft, which could be affected by an issue that caused coolant leaks aboard Soyuz MS-22 and Progress MS-21 transport ships.

On March 11, 2023, Sergei Krikalev, Head of Piloted Space Flight at Roskosmos, confirmed to the Interfax news agency, that an earlier launch for the Soyuz MS-24 had been under consideration among several other scenarios. However, the meeting of the State Commission on March 24, 2023, kept the schedule as is for the time being, possibly because it would be impossible to sustain future crew rotations aboard the ISS with earlier launches.

Soyuz MS-24 launch campaign

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The first phase of preparation for the Soyuz MS-24 mission started in the processing building at Site 254 on March 17, 2023, with a visual inspection, initial measurements and the connection of the ship to test equipment, RKK Energia said. By March 24, specialists completed autonomous tests of Soyuz' avionics and Kazbek cosmonauts seats on ground-based stands.

In the last week of March 2023, specialists from RKK Energia powered up the onboard computer system, TV and radio equipment aboard Soyuz MS-24 and tested the pressurization of the ship's Thermal Control System, SOTR, (INSIDER CONTENT). The testing of the spacecraft in the anechoic chamber, BEK, at Site 254 was performed on April 14. On April 29, engineers powered up the ship's onboard systems to perform the simulation of launch readiness and integrated tests during various flight modes. The spacecraft was then mothballed at the work site until the start of its active launch campaign, Roskosmos said, indicating that the earlier launch of the Soyuz MS-24 had been ruled out for the time being.

On May 6, Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub were reported conducting final fit checks of Sokol KV-2 safety suits and Kazbek-UM seats at NPP Zvezda enterprise.

On June 3, 2023, Roskosmos announced that Kononenko and Chub had completed several weeks of training in Houston on the US Segment of the station and the joint emergency exercise with NASA's 7th commercial crew simulating fire, depressurization and toxic spill aboard the ISS.

By June 8, 2023, the four boosters of the first stage were attached to the core (second) stage of the Soyuz-2-1a rocket inside the vehicle assembly building at Site 31.

By Aug. 10, 2023, Soyuz MS-24 was placed into a vacuum chamber at Site 254 for pressure tests, which were completed on August 15, when the spacecraft was returned to its processing site. On Aug. 17, 2023, Roskosmos reported that An-12 transport plane had landed at Krainy airport in Baikonur with an Emergency Escape System, SAS, for the Soyuz MS-24 mission. The rocket unit was then transported to Site 112.

On Aug. 25, 2023, the Inter-agency Qualification Commission at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center confirmed the readiness of the Soyuz MS-24 crews for flight.

The primary and backup crews of Expedition 70/71 arrived at Baikonur on Aug. 29, 2023, for the final two-week period of preparation for the Soyuz MS-24 launch. On the same day, both crews conducted "fit checks" inside their flight-ready Soyuz spacecraft. Right after the familiarization training, the spacecraft was transferred to the fueling station at Site 31, where propellant and pressurized gases loading operations commenced on August 31. Fueling operations were completed on September 1, after which the spacecraft was transported back to Site 254.

On Sept. 5, 2023, Soyuz MS-24 was connected to its launch vehicle adapter, after the specialists performed weighing of the spacecraft and loaded around 120 kilograms of cargo intended for delivery to the ISS. They also conducted the final visual inspection of the spacecraft, after which the payload fairing was then installed on September 7. The vehicle was then put back in vertical position for a launch readiness simulation.

On September 10, members of the primary and backup crew conducted another training inside the flight-worthy spacecraft, after which specialists loaded the payload section with the spacecraft on a rail trailer and transported it to the vehicle assembly building at Site 31 for integration with the rocket, which took place on September 11. On the same say, the vehicle was cleared for rollout to the launch pad, which took place on the morning of Sept. 12, 2023.

Soyuz MS-24 enters orbit

A Soyuz-2-1a rocket carrying the Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft lifted off from Baikonur on Sept. 15, 2023, at 18:44:35.417 Moscow Time (11:44 a.m. EDT).

Propelled by the simultaneous thrust of the four engines of the first stage and the single engine of the second stage, the rocket headed almost exactly east to align its ascent trajectory with an orbital plane inclined 51.6 degrees toward the Equator. Slightly less than two minutes into the flight (L+113.69 seconds), at an altitude of around 45 kilometers and a velocity of 1.75 kilometers per second, the ship's main emergency escape rocket was jettisoned, immediately followed by the separation of the four boosters of the first stage at L+117.85 seconds into the flight.

Around 35 seconds later, as the vehicle exited the dense atmosphere at an altitude of 79 kilometers and a velocity of 2.2 kilometers per second, the payload fairing protecting the spacecraft split into two halves and fell away at L+153.92 seconds into the flight.

The second (core) stage of the rocket continued firing until 4.8 minutes into the flight (L+287.70 seconds). Moments before the second stage completed its work, the four-chamber engine of the third stage ignited, firing through the lattice structure connecting the two stages. Moments after the separation of the core booster at an altitude of 157 kilometers and a velocity of 3.8 kilometers per second, the tail section of the third stage split into three segments and separated as well at L+296.31 seconds into the flight.

Following the 8-minute 49-second climb to orbit, the third stage of the rocket cut off at L+526.18 seconds into the flight, releasing Soyuz MS-24 into an initial orbit with an inclination 51.6 degrees toward the Equator and an altitude of around 200 kilometers.

Rendezvous and docking operations

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Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft was scheduled to rendezvous with the ISS on the day of the launch, after a two-orbit, three-hour 14-minute autonomous flight.

Around 38 minutes after launch, at 19:23:25 Moscow Time, Soyuz MS-24 was scheduled to perform an initial orbit correction with its main SKD engine, which was to last 13 seconds and deliver 4.74 meters per second in velocity change. The maneuver would put the spacecraft in a 404.683 by 431.497-kilometer orbit to begin an autonomous rendezvous with the station during its second revolution around the Earth. At the time, the station was forecasted to be in a 414.750 by 438.183-kilometer orbit, close enough for the transport ship to perform a fully autonomous rendezvous.

As usual, the Russian mission control in Korolev planned additional six maneuvers with the transport ship's SKD and DPO engines during the autonomous rendezvous with the station:

No. Moscow Time Distance from ISS Delta V Burn duration Engines used
SB1 19:53:04 627.47 kilometers 53.40 meters per second 132.2 seconds SKD
bok 20:18:56 185.09 kilometers 0.96 meters per second 24.6 seconds DPO
SB2 20:39:45 96.57 kilometers 55.53 meters per second 137.2 seconds SKD
SB3-1 21:26:25 2.04 kilometers 5.29 meters per second 16.0 seconds SKD
SB3-2 21:30:35 1.02 kilometer 5.93 meters per second 75.4 seconds DPO
SB3-3 21:33:25 0.61 kilometers 1.46 meters per second 12.6 seconds DPO

According to the Russian mission control in Korolev, the autonomous rendezvous of Soyuz MS-24 had the following timeline:

  • 19:33:58 Moscow Time: Beginning of autonomous rendezvous with the ISS;
  • 20:22:58 Moscow Time: Activation of the Kurs rendezvous system aboard the Zvezda Service Module, SM;
  • 20:23:58 Moscow Time: Activation of the Kurs rendezvous system aboard Soyuz MS-24;
  • 21:36 — 21:41 Moscow Time: Fly-around of the station;
  • 21:41 — 21:44 Moscow Time: Station-keeping of the spacecraft near ISS before final approach;
  • 21:44 — 21:56 Moscow Time: Final approach to the Rassvet module, MIM1;
  • 21:56:00 Moscow Time: Contact.

The 54-degree, three-minute flyaround of the station began from a distance of around 400 meters to align the spacecraft with the nadir-facing docking port of the Rassvet module. The spacecraft then started the final approach from a distance of around 200 meters.

The docking of the crew vehicle with the Rassvet module, MIM1, a part of the Russian Segment of the ISS was scheduled for 21:56 Moscow Time (2:56 p.m. EDT) on Sept. 15, 2023, but the contact and capture took place three minutes earlier at 21:53:32 Moscow Time as the two spacecraft were flying over Ukraine. According to data from mission control, peripheral interfaces of the docking port were connected at 21:57:08 Moscow Time, followed by the closure of the main ring two tenths of second later. Hooks on both sides of the port then started driving, closing by 21:58:43 Moscow Time. The docking process was completed with the retraction of the latches on the passive part of the port holding the docking probe of the active mechanism at 22:00:42 Moscow Time (3 p.m EDT).

After a series of leak checks, the hatches between the spacecraft and the station were scheduled to be opened according to the following schedule:

  • 21:53:32 Moscow Time: Contact;
  • 21:54 — 22:55 Moscow Time: The hooks closure on MIM1 (Rassvet), Pressure checks; crew transfer to the Habitation Module, BO;
  • 22:55 — 00:10 Moscow Time: Spacesuits removal, drying of pressure safety suits; docking port pressurization checks;
  • 00:10 — 00:50 Moscow Time: Pressure equalization between the crew vehicle and the station. Hatch opening; TV report.

The hatches between the newly arrived crew vehicle and the station were opened at 00:16 Moscow Time on September 16, (5:16 p.m. EDT on Sept. 15, 2023).

Soyuz MS-24 returns to Earth

undocking

Soyuz MS-24 undocks from the ISS on April 6, 2024.


At the time of its launch in 2023, the Soyuz MS-24 mission was expected to end on March 25, 2024. However with a domino effect of delays in the ISS manifest, the Soyuz MS-24 landing date first drifted to April 2, 2024. Following the launch delay of the Soyuz MS-25 mission from March 21 to March 23, 2024, the landing of the Soyuz MS-24 was re-scheduled for April 6, 2024.

Aboard Soyuz MS-24 during its trip to Earth were Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky and a visitor from Belarus Marina Vasilevskaya, who both arrived at the station on March 25, 2024, on Soyuz MS-25. They were accompanied by a NASA astronaut Loral O'Hara, a member of Expedition 70 aboard the ISS, who originally launched on Soyuz MS-24 almost seven months earlier. Inside the ship's Descent Module, Novitsky occupied central seat with O'Hara to his right and Vasilevskaya in the right seat.

According to Roskosmos, hatches between the departing crew vehicle and the station were scheduled to close between 03:40 and 04:00 Moscow Time on April 6, 2024, (8:40 p.m. - 9 p.m. EDT on April 5). NASA projected the operation to take place at around 8:26 p.m. EDT.

NASA then confirmed the hatch closure on the Soyuz side of the docking mechanism at 8:45 p.m. EDT, just minutes after the station's hatch had been closed.

According to the Russian mission control, the ISS departure operations had the following timeline:

  • 03:45:00 Moscow Time: Closing of transfer hatches;
  • 04:00 — 05:00 Moscow Time: Transfer hatches leak checks, suiting-up operations;
  • 05:00 — 05:30 Moscow Time: Crew transfer to the Descent Module, closing of a hatch between the Descent Module and the Habitation Module;
  • 05:30 — 05:57 Moscow Time: Pressure suits leak checks;
  • 05:57 — 06:35 Moscow Time: Leak checks in the hatch between the Descent and Habitation modules.

Landing operations

crew

Members of the Soyuz MS-24 crew after landing (left to right): Loren O'Hara, Oleg Novitsky and Marina Vasilevskaya.


According to the Russian mission control, the Soyuz MS-24 landing had the following timeline:

  • 06:54 — 06:56 Moscow Time: Undocking;
  • 09:23:53 Moscow Time: Braking engine firing begins at an altitude of 440.3 kilometers;
  • 09:28:34 Moscow Time: Braking engine cutoff at an altitude of 430.3 kilometers;
  • 09:51:41 Moscow Time: Separation of the spacecraft into the Descent, Habitation and Instrument modules at an altitude of 139.9 kilometers;
  • 09:54:35 Moscow Time: Descent Module atmospheric reentry at an altitude of 99.4 kilometers;
  • 10:03:07 Moscow Time: Activation of the main parachute system at an altitude of 10.7 kilometers;
  • 10:17:36 Moscow Time: Touchdown at 47 degrees 20 minutes North latitude, 69 degrees 36 minutes East longitude.

The undocking of the Soyuz MS-24 from the Rassvet module, MIM1, was scheduled for 06:55 Moscow Time on April 6, 2024, Roskosmos said (11:54 p.m. EDT on April 5, according to NASA) and it took place roughly on schedule, as the two spacecraft were flying over Mongolia.

The departure of Soyuz MS-24 from the station marked the start of Expedition 71 aboard the ISS.

After a 2.5-hour period in the autonomous flight, which took it around 39 kilometers from the station, Soyuz MS-24 initiated a 4-minute 41-second deorbiting maneuver with its SKD engine at 09:24 Moscow Time (2:23.53 a.m. EDT according to NASA) on April 6 over the Southern Atlantic.

The retrograde firing sent the spacecraft on its way into the atmosphere, followed by the separation of the Habitation and Instrument Modules from the Descent Module (INSIDER CONTENT) carrying the crew at 09:52 Moscow Time (7:52 a.m. EDT).

Two minutes later, the crew capsule hit the dense atmosphere and, after performing the aerodynamic braking, began deployment of its main parachute at 10:03 Moscow Time (3:03 a.m. EDT).

At that time, Russian mission control reported following parameters of the atmospheric descent:

  Altitude Velocity G-loads
Atmospheric entry 99.4 kilometers 7.626 kilometers per second 0.00
  80.4 kilometers 7.626 kilometers per second 0.09
  34.9 kilometers 2.332 kilometers per second 3.98
Deployment of main parachute system, OSP 10.7 kilometers 0.215 kilometers per second 1.18

The parachute descent phase of the landing called for the jettisoning of the parachute container cover at an altitude 10.5 kilometers and the deployment of the braking parachute at 9.5 kilometers. The braking parachute then triggered the deployment of the main parachute system before separating at an altitude of 8.5 kilometers.

After the capsule descended to an altitude of 5.5 kilometers under the main parachute, its main heat shield was jettisoned, exposing soft-landing solid-propellant motors at the bottom of the bell-shaped module. At an altitude of 5.3 kilometers, the parachute system switched to a landing configuration, ensuring the vertical position of the capsule at touchdown and the proper firing of braking engine just around half a meter from the ground.

The touchdown of the Descent Module was scheduled around 147 kilometers southeast of Dzhezkazgan in Kazakhstan. Ahead of the landing, the touchdown area had good weather with a few clouds and low wind, which facilitated early detection and visual tracking of the capsule during the final phase of the descent. The actual touchdown took place as scheduled at at 10:17 Moscow Time on April 6, 2024.

Rescue helicopters, which quickly reached the the Descent Module, found it on its side after the touchdown. By that time, mission control displayed actual landing coordinates as 47 degrees 24 minutes North latitude, 69 degrees 38 minutes East longitude.

All three members of the Soyuz MS-24 crew were extracted from the capsule within around a half an hour after landing. They were then transported to an airfield in Karaganda in Kazakhstan, from where Novitsky and Vasilevskaya were supposed to fly to Star City, while O'Hara to take a flight to Houston, Texas.

 

Soyuz MS-24 crew members:

Assignment
Primary crew at launch
Backup crew
Crew at landing
Soyuz commander
Oleg Kononenko (Roskosmos)
Aleksei Ovchinin (Roskosmos)
Oleg Novitsky (Roskosmos)
Flight engineer 1
Nikolai Chub (Roskosmos)
-
Marina Vasilevskaya (Belarus)
Flight engineer 2
Loral O'Hara (NASA)
Tracy Caldwell Dyson (NASA)
Loral O'Hara (NASA)

 

 

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This page is maintained by Anatoly Zak; Last update: September 11, 2024

Page editor: Alain Chabot; Edit: September 15, 2023

All rights reserved

 

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logo

Soyuz MS-24 mission logo. Click to enlarge. Credit: Roskosmos


Initial processing of Soyuz MS-24 in Baikonur. Click to enlarge. Credit: Roskosmos


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Encapsulation of the Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft in Baikonur. The payload fairing for the mission had an insignia dedicated to the 105th anniversary since the birth of Sergei Afanasiev, the Minister of General Machine-building, MOM, a Soviet-era predecessor of Roskosmos. Click to enlarge. Credit: Roskosmos


soyuz

Cosmonauts and astronauts during final training for the Soyuz MS-24 mission (primary crew, front row, left to right): NASA astronaut Loral O'Hara, Soyuz commander Oleg Kononenko and flight engineer Nikolai Chub; (backup crew, second row, left to right): NASA astronaut and flight engineer Tracy Caldwell Dyson, Roskosmos cosmonaut and Soyuz commander Aleksei Ovchinin. Click to enlarge. Credit: Roskosmos


soyuz

Soyuz MS-24 shortly after its rollout to launch pad at Site 31. Click to enlarge. Credit: Roskosmos


separation

Soyuz MS-24 enters orbit as seen by a camera aboard the third stage of the launch vehicle. Credit: Roskosmos


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US astronaut Loral O'Hara inside Habitation Module of the Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft. Click to enlarge.


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Descent Module of the Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft heads for landing on April 6, 2024. Click to enlarge.


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Descent Module of the Soyuz MS-24 touches down on April 6, 2024. Click to enlarge.


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Descent Module of the Soyuz MS-24 ended up on its side after landing on April 6, 2024. Click to enlarge.


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Aerial view of the Soyuz MS-24 landing site. Click to enlarge.


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Even after landing on its side, the Descent Module of the Soyuz spacecraft is placed into vertical position for post-landing processing after the extraction of the crew, as was the case with Soyuz MS-24. Click to enlarge.