Tim Peake s Spacecraft

Similar documents
Three International Space Station astronauts land in Kazakhstan 18 June 2016, by Vladimir Isachenkov

Pearson Edexcel Level 1/Level 2 GCSE (9 1) English Language. Paper 2: Non-fiction and Transactional Writing Section A: Reading Texts Insert

Nasa Space Shuttle Crew Escape Systems. Handbook >>>CLICK HERE<<<

NJ Physics Professor Has the 'Right Stuff' Valorie Sands

Credits. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. United Space Alliance, LLC. John Frassanito and Associates Strategic Visualization

Sally Ride. LEVELED READER BOOK OA Sally Ride. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Lovereading4kids Reader reviews of The Usborne Official Astronaut s Handbook by Louie Stowell and Illustrated by Roger Simo

SHOULD SPACE TRAVEL BE LEFT TO PRIVATE COMPANIES?

UNIT E: SPACE EXPLORATION

Statement of Astronaut Peggy Whitson (Ph.D) National Aeronautics and Space Administration. before the

SPACE CAMP RUSSIA ACTIVITIES DESCRIPTION

Online Book Club The Mission Possible Mystery at Space Center Houston. Bring It To Life!

ALEXANDER GERST. A scientist back to space

WHAT WILL AMERICA DO IN SPACE NOW?

Seven Minutes of Terror, Eight Years of Ingenuity

Astronaut Edwin Buzz Aldrin climbing down the ladder of Apollo 11 and onto the surface of the Moon on July 20, (National Aeronautics

Operation Paperclip. End of WWII Secret operation to capture Nazi scientists Wernher von Braun and 1,600 scientists V2 Rockets

MARTIAN HISTORY QUIZ SHOW

3, 2, 1... Blast Off!

Space Exploration. Summary. Contents. Rob Waring. Level 3-1. Before Reading Think Ahead During Reading Comprehension... 5

60 YEARS OF NASA. Russia and America. NASA s achievements SPECIAL REPORT. Look Closer

Where are the Agencies Human Space Flight (HFR) Programs Heading? USA (NASA) System Description Goal Remarks * Space Launch System (SLS) Program

Astronaut Avatar. Curriculum links Space 1.1, 2.3, 2.5, 3.3

Alan Shepard, : The First American to Travel into Space

The Past and the Future of Spaceflight. Dr. Ugur GUVEN Aerospace Engineer Nuclear Science & Technology Engineer

Robotics in Space. Ian Taylor MP. Co-Chair, UK Parliamentary Space Committee VIIIth European Interparliamentary Space Conference

Ellen Ochoa began training as an astronaut in 1990, twelve

Mission to. Mars. Mars: Exploring a New Frontier The Challenges of Space Travel. Get to Mars?

Written and Produced by Vix Southgate YURI GAGARIN T H E F I R S T S P A C E M A N TEACHING PACK 1. for KEY STAGE 1

Sponsored Educational Materials Grades 6 8 TALENT FOR TOMORROW

AVSS Project. ENAE483 Fall 2012

European Manned Space Projects and related Technology Development. Dipl.Ing. Jürgen Herholz Mars Society Deutschland Board Member marssociety.

1. The Space Station has been built with the cooperation of Orbiting 250 miles overhead, the Space Station can be seen

Project of space experiment "Shadow" on ISS

Team-up with NASA astronauts Launch your school into history and be amongst the first Indian students to send their experiments into space. isset.

NEO Science and Human Space Activity. Mark V. Sykes Director, Planetary Science Institute Chair, NASA Small Bodies Assessment Group

Online Book Club Adventure to the Planet Mars. Bring It To Life!

Testimony to the President s Commission on Implementation of the United States Space Exploration Policy

Astronaut Tim Kopra 13BUS circles the planet sixteen times a day. What on earth propels him?

Eighth Grade Summer Reading Assignment

TRAVELING-TO-MARS STATION

Mars 1 Journey Begins

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

Nanosat Deorbit and Recovery System to Enable New Missions

A Unified Space Vision

THE U.S. RUSSIA SPACE EXPERIENCE: A SPECIAL AND UNIQUE PARTNERSHIP

Human Spaceflight: Past, Present, and Future (if any) James Flaten MN Space Grant Consortium Univ. of MN Minneapolis

Russian breaks time-in-space record

NASA and private businesses must cooperate if Mars mission is to succeed

FREE ENTRY WEDNESDAY 14 MARCH 7PM 10PM #SOYUZTOUR

This edition first published in 2009 by Gareth Stevens Publishing A Weekly Reader Company 1 Reader s Digest Road Pleasantville, NY USA

Firsthand Account. A description of an event that is told by someone who was there to experience it.

Challenger Center Teacher Resources for Engaging Students in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math

When Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Arkhipovich

Workshop on Intelligent System and Applications (ISA 17)

Test Booklet. Subject: LA, Grade: 04 LEAP Grade 4 Language Arts Student name:

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Seven Minutes of Terror, Eight Years of Ingenuity

The Republic of Kazakhstan Space Activity

2 Thinking shed Ape in space

Shooting for the Moon

Mars Spaceship All About Mars A Space Book For Kids Solar System And Planets For Children

Engineering Design Challenge: Spacecraft Structures

THE COMPLETE COSMOS Chapter 15: Where Next? Outline Sub-chapters

ACTIVITY OF RUSSIAN FEDERATION ON SPACE DEBRIS PROBLEM

On July 8th, 2011, STS 135, the final space shuttle mission, launched from the

A RENEWED SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY

You did an amazing job at our customer appreciation event... those customers are still talking about it!

Name. Ellen Ochoa, A Woman Of Many Talents Question1. Answer. Question2. Answer. Miss Maggie s Weekly Lesson Packet No. 30 Sept.

GALACTIC SUITE DESIGN

EXPLORATION FLIGHT TEST ONE Orion s Trial By Fire

ì<(sk$m)=beadcj< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

English. Year 4. Reading. Sample. This booklet contains the reading text: Space Tourism Please write your answers in the reading answer booklet.

A Call for Boldness. President Kennedy September 1962

Engineering Sciences and Technology. Landing on Mars

Network with the top scientists, engineers and educators from the United States, Canada, and Japan.

space &adventure programs GoNASTARCenter.com

The Challenge of Exploration: From Apollo to Pluto. Andrew Chaikin

The Interlude. Please sign up for Friday if you would like to give a presentation.

Space Exploration Timeline

Dream Chaser Frequently Asked Questions

HEOMD Update NRC Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board Oct. 16, 2014

Engineering Adventures

space space shuttle Barack Obama

INSPIRING KEYNOTES AND WORKSHOPS

Written by Kamal S. Prasad Illustrated by Aurore Simonnet

Race to the Moon: The Days of Project Gemini

8th - 12th July Michael Foale. Tony Antonelli TEAM-UP WITH TWO NASA ASTRONAUTS & LAUNCH YOUR IDEAS INTO SPACE!

Four Aerospace Issues Addressed by the Kennedy Space Center Applied Physics Lab

NASA Mission Directorates

International Space Station crew celebrate 15th anniversary in orbit.

SPACE EXPLOR ATION. STEM-Based

Scientists think we could start living, breathing, and even growing food on the Red Planet in your lifetime. So what do you say?

Apollo Part 1 13 Sept 2017

Before you read this non-fiction article, think about these questions:

The First Manned Spaceflight: Russia's Quest For Space By Vladimir Suvorov READ ONLINE

Dear Parents/Guardians and Friends of SPC:

Picturing Motion 2.1. Frames of Reference. 30 MHR Unit 1 Kinematics

HSC Physics Band 6 Notes - Module 1 (Space)

Getting to Mars Psychological needs/concerns By: Elisabeth Ambrose

Team-up with Astronaut Michael Foale & launch YOUR ideas into space!

Transcription:

Tim Peake s Spacecraft Soyuz descent module TMA-19M TALKING Ages 7 11 11 14 14 16 Topics Skills used EARTH AND SPACE FORCES OBSERVATION DISCUSSION

Tim Peake s spacecraft Tim Peake was the first European Space Agency astronaut from Britain to travel to the International Space Station (ISS). He blasted into orbit with American NASA astronaut Tim Kopraand Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko. Tim and his crewmates spent six months on the ISS working on science experiments that will help us in the next stages of our exploration of the Solar System and help improve our lives on Earth. These images follow Tim s journey, from the launch of the Soyuz rocket towards the ISS, right up to his return to Earth on 18 June 2016.

Images in this pack

Using images in your classroom The Science Museum is full of amazing objects which are all examples of how science and technology has changed and improved our everyday lives. You can use images: To hook students interest at the start of a lesson or to introduce a new topic. To highlight the relevance and practical applications of science principles in our everyday lives. As part of a discussion to explore the stories of the people who have shaped the world we live in through their passion and creativity. As mystery objects and get your students using their science skills such as observation, using prior knowledge and asking questions. To create a display of applications of science in your classroom, connecting past, present and future examples of technology. In a pre-visit activity to familiarise students with some of the objects and themes they will find in the Science Museum.

Talk about... Use these starter questions to help get your students thinking and talking about how the science and technology of space travel affects our everyday lives: What interests you or surprises you about these images? If you lived on the ISS for 186 days, like Tim Peake, what would you take with you to remind you of home? Do you think it s important to spend money sending humans into space? Do you think humans will ever live on another planet? What factors would you have to consider if you were sending humans to live in space? What would you like to know more about? How could you find out more?

The Soyuz rocket and spacecraft SOYUZ SPACECRAFT SOYUZ ROCKET Image The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

This diagram shows the Soyuz rocket, spacecraft and detail of the descent module. The Soyuz rocket launches the spacecraft into space. After the launch the rocket separates from the spacecraft and returns to Earth. The Soyuz spacecraft docks with the ISS and the crew enter the space station through a hatch. When it s time for the crew to return to Earth, they ride in the descent module, the middle section of the Soyuz spacecraft, which is the only section that returns to Earth.

Image: UKSA Max Alexander

NASA astronaut Tim Kopra, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenkoand British ESA astronaut Tim Peake sit outside the Soyuz simulator (a version of the spacecraft used for training) in Star City, Moscow. Malenchenko was the commander, the two Tims were flight engineers. Think and talk about... How do you think Tim Peake and the crew might have felt before launching into space? What do you think it would feel like to wear aspacesuit?

Image: UKSA Max Alexander

Tim Peake inside the Soyuz spacecraft simulator. The rocket itself is largely automated, but occasionally the crew are required to take control manually. Think and talk about... The descent module is only 2.2 metres wide. What do you think it would have felt like to complete the six-hour journey to the ISS in this small space with two other astronauts?

Image: NASA

The Soyuz rocket takes off from its launch pad in Baikonur, Kazakhstan, with the crew on board. Think and talk about... How does this rocket look similar or different to other rockets you have seen?

Image: ESA/NASA Orbital module Descent module Instrument service module

The Soyuz spacecraft docks with the ISS, ready for the crew to disembark. The spacecraft consists of three parts, which you can see in the image. The orbital module docks with the ISS. The descent module is in the centre, and is where the crew sit for their journey to and from space. The third module contains life support systems such as batteries, solar panels and steering engines it is known as the instrument service module.

Image: NASA Bill Ingalls

During the final stages of its return journey to Earth, the descent module used a parachute to slow from a speed of 287 km/h to 22 km/h to ensure a safe landing. The module is shaped for maximum strength during its fiery descent through the Earth s atmosphere. Its underside is covered with a heat shield, jettisoned before landing, which protects the spacecraft from the intense heating of reentry.

Image: NASA Bill Ingalls

The descent module lands back on Earth in the plains of Kazakhstan. The distinctive white and orange stripes of the parachute mean that the module can be found easily by the recovery team. The parachute is about the size of two tennis courts. The Soyuz descent module has a main parachute plus a reserve one to use in case the main parachute doesn t open. The clouds of smoke you can see are from the landing engines, which fire a couple of metres from the ground to ensure a safe landing.

Image: NASA Bill Ingalls

After spending a long time experiencing the weightlessness of space, the astronauts muscles will have weakened significantly, so they need to be helped out of the capsule by the ground crew. Here, Tim Peake gets used to being back on Earth. The sun will seem very bright after all that time in space, which is why Tim is wearing sunglasses. Think and talk about... You might also notice that Tim is on the phone who do you think he is talking to? Who would be the first person you would phone after returning to Earth from space?

Image The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

The Soyuz descent module on display in the Science Museum. The outside of the module is covered in a heat-resistant coating to protect it from the intense heat generated during its descent through the Earth s atmosphere, when temperatures reached 17,000 C. Think and talk about... Look closely at the surface of the module. Can you see the scorch marks caused by the intense heat?

Image The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

The Soyuz descent module s interior, seen through the empty reserve parachute hatch.

Image The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

Inside the module you can see the three seats used by the crew. The seats are specifically moulded to the body shape of each crew member, which ensures the astronauts are kept safe and firmly in place during the bumpy ride back to Earth. Tim Peake made the journeyup to and back from the ISS in the righthand seat.

Image The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

Control panels inside the descent module. Some of these are exact replicas of the controls the astronauts used the real ones can be used again on future space missions.

Images The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

This is the reserve parachute container for the Soyuz descent module (the parachute has been removed). You can see lettering inside which explains in Russian and in English how to open the hatch and get the astronauts out. This has been added in case the module drifts off course when it lands and is found by an ordinary citizen. Think and talk about... What would you do if a descent module landed in your back garden?