Soyuz TMA

Soyuz-TMA
ManufacturerEnergia
Country of origin Russia
OperatorRoscosmos
ApplicationsISS crew transport
Specifications
RegimeLow Earth orbit
Design lifeUp to six months docked to ISS
Production
StatusRetired
Launched22
Maiden launch30 October 2002
(Soyuz TMA-1)
Last launch14 November 2011
(Soyuz TMA-22)
Related spacecraft
Derived fromSoyuz-TM
DerivativesSoyuz TMA-M

The Soyuz-TMA (Russian: транспортный модифицированный антропометрический, romanizedTransportnyi Modifitsirovannyi Antropometricheskii, lit.'Transport Modified Anthropometric') was a spacecraft built by Energia and used by Roscosmos for human spaceflight. It is a revision of the Soyuz spacecraft introduced in 2001 and was in use until 2012 after being superseded in 2010 by the Soyuz TMA-M. While it looks identical to the earlier Soyuz-TM on the outside, the spacecraft features several changes to accommodate requirements requested by NASA to better service the International Space Station.[1] The most important difference are the anthropometric changes, primarily in the form of new adjustable crew couches that allowed shorter, taller, lighter and heavier passengers to ride in the spacecraft. The Soyuz also received improved parachute systems and a "glass cockpit," a first for an expendable vehicle.

Design

A Soyuz spacecraft consists of three parts (from front to back):

The first two portions are habitable living space. By moving as much as possible into the orbital module, which does not have to be shielded or decelerated during atmospheric re-entry, the Soyuz three-part craft is both larger and lighter than the two-part Apollo spacecraft's command module. The Apollo command module had six cubic meters of living space and a mass of 5000 kg; the three-part Soyuz provided the same crew with nine cubic meters of living space, an airlock, and a service module for the mass of the Apollo capsule alone. This does not consider the orbital module, that could be used instead of the Apollo Lunar Module.

Soyuz can carry up to three cosmonauts and provide life support for them for about 30 person days. The life support system provides a nitrogen/oxygen atmosphere at sea level partial pressures. The atmosphere is regenerated through KO2 cylinders, which absorb most of the CO2 and water produced by the crew and regenerates the oxygen, and LiOH cylinders which absorb leftover CO2.

The vehicle is protected during launch by a nose fairing, which is jettisoned after passing through the atmosphere. It has an automatic docking system. The ship can be operated automatically, or by a pilot independently of ground control.

Orbital Module (BO)

The forepart of the spacecraft is the orbital module ((in Russian): бытовой отсек (BO), Bitovoy otsek) also known as Habitation section. It houses all the equipment that will not be needed for reentry, such as experiments, cameras or cargo. Commonly, it is used as both eating area and lavatory. At its far end, it also contains the docking port. This module also contains a toilet, docking avionics and communications gear. On the latest Soyuz versions, a small window was introduced, providing the crew with a forward view.

A hatch between it and the descent module can be closed so as to isolate it to act as an airlock if needed, cosmonauts exiting through its side port (at the bottom of this picture, near the descent module) on the launch pad, they have entered the spacecraft through this port.

This separation also lets the orbital module be customized to the mission with less risk to the life-critical descent module. The convention of orientation in zero gravity differs from that of the descent module, as cosmonauts stand or sit with their heads to the docking port.

Reentry Module (SA)

The reentry module ((in Russian): спускаемый аппарат (СА), Spuskaemiy apparat (SA)) is used for launch and the journey back to Earth. It is covered by a heat-resistant covering to protect it during re-entry. It is slowed initially by the atmosphere, then by a braking parachute, followed by the main parachute which slows the craft for landing. At one meter above the ground, solid-fuel braking engines mounted behind the heat shield are fired to give a soft landing. One of the design requirements for the reentry module was for it to have the highest possible volumetric efficiency (internal volume divided by hull area). The best shape for this is a sphere, but such a shape can provide no lift, which results in a purely ballistic reentry. Ballistic reentries are hard on the occupants due to high deceleration and can't be steered beyond their initial deorbit burn. That is why it was decided to go with the "headlight" shape that the Soyuz uses — a hemispherical forward area joined by a barely angled conical section (seven degrees) to a classic spherical section heat shield. This shape allows a small amount of lift to be generated due to the unequal weight distribution. The nickname was coined at a time when nearly every automobile headlight was a circular paraboloid.

Service Module (PAO)

At the back of the vehicle is the service module ((in Russian): приборно-агрегатный отсек, Priborno-Agregatniy Otsek (PAO)). It has an instrumentation compartment ((in Russian): приборный отсек, Priborniy Otsek (PO)), a pressurized container shaped like a bulging can that contains systems for temperature control, electric power supply, long-range radio communications, radio telemetry, and instruments for orientation and control. The propulsion compartment ((in Russian): агрегатный отсек, Agregatniy Otsek (AO)), a non-pressurized part of the service module, contains the main engine and a spare: liquid-fuel propulsion systems for maneuvering in orbit and initiating the descent back to Earth. The ship also has a system of low-thrust engines for orientation, attached to the intermediate compartment ((in Russian): переходной отсек, Perekhodnoi Otsek (PkhO)). Outside the service module are the sensors for the orientation system and the solar array, which is oriented towards the Sun by rotating the ship.

Re-entry procedure

Because its modular construction differs from that of previous designs, the Soyuz has an unusual sequence of events prior to re-entry. The spacecraft is turned engine-forward and the main engine is fired for de-orbiting fully 180° ahead of its planned landing site. This requires the least propellant for re-entry, the spacecraft traveling on an elliptical Hohmann orbit to a point where it will be low enough in the atmosphere to re-enter.

Early Soyuz spacecraft would then have the service and orbital modules detach simultaneously. As they are connected by tubing and electrical cables to the descent module, this would aid in their separation and avoid having the descent module alter its orientation. Later Soyuz spacecraft detach the orbital module before firing the main engine, which saves even more propellant, enabling the descent module to return more payload. In no case can the orbital module remain in orbit as an addition to a space station, for the hatch enabling it to function as an airlock is part of the descent module.

Re-entry firing is typically done on the "dawn" side of the Earth, so that the spacecraft can be seen by recovery helicopters as it descends in the evening twilight, illuminated by the sun when it is above the shadow of the Earth. Since the beginning of Soyuz missions to the ISS, only five have performed nighttime landings.[2]

Spacecraft systems

  • Thermal Control SystemSistema Obespecheniya Teplovogo Rezhima, SOTR - Cистема Обеспечения Теплового Режима, COTP
  • Life support systemKompleks Sredstv Obespecheniya Zhiznideyatelnosti, KSOZh - Комплекс Средств Обеспечения Жизнедеятельности, KCOЖ
  • Power Supply SystemSistema Elektropitaniya, SEP - Система Электропитания, CЭП
  • Communication and Tracking Systems – Rassvet (Dawn) radio communications system, Onboard Measurement System (SBI), Kvant-V spacecraft control, Klyost-M television system, Orbit Radio Tracking (RKO)
  • Onboard Complex Control SystemSistema Upravleniya Bortovym Kompleksom, SUBK - Система Управления Бортовым Комплексом, СУБК
  • Combined Propulsion SystemKompleksnaya Dvigatelnaya Ustanovka, KDU - Комплексная Двигательная Установка, КДУ
  • Chaika-3 Motion Control SystemSistema Upravleniya Dvizheniem, SUD - Cистема Управления Движением, СУД
  • Optical/Visual Devices (OVP)- VSK-4 (Vizir Spetsialniy Kosmicheskiy-4 - Визир Специальный Космический-4), Night Vision Device (VNUK-K, Visir Nochnogo Upravleniya po Kursu - ВНУK-К, Визир Ночного Управления по Курсу), Docking light, Pilot's Sight (VP-1, Vizir Pilota-1 - ВП-1, Визир Пилота-1), Laser Range Finder (LPR-1, Lazerniy Dalnomer-1 - ЛПР-1, Лазерный Дальномер-1)
  • Kurs rendezvous system
  • Docking SystemSistema Stykovki i Vnutrennego Perekhoda, SSVP - Система Стыковки и Внутреннего Перехода, ССВП
  • Teleoperator Control ModeTeleoperatorniy Rezhim Upravleniya, TORU - Телеоператорный Режим Управления, ТОРУ
  • Entry Actuators SystemSistema Ispolnitelnikh Organov Spuska, SIO-S - Система Исполнительных Органов Спуска, СИО-С
  • Landing Aids KitKompleks Sredstv Prizemleniya, KSP - Комплекс Средств Приземления, КСП
  • Portable Survival KitNosimiy Avariyniy Zapas, NAZ - Носимый Аварийный Запас, НАЗ
  • Soyuz launch escape systemSistema Avariynogo Spaseniya, SAS - Система Аварийного Спасения, САС

Flights

Mission Launch Vehicle Crew Notes Duration
Launch Landing
Soyuz TMA-1 Soyuz-FG Sergey Zalyotin
Frank De Winne
Yury Lonchakov
Nikolai Budarin
Ken Bowersox
Donald Pettit
Delivered crew to ISS. 185 days
Soyuz TMA-2 Soyuz-FG Yuri Malenchenko
Ed Lu
Yuri Malenchenko
Ed Lu
Pedro Duque
Delivered Expedition 7/8 crew to ISS. 184 days
Soyuz TMA-3 Soyuz-FG Aleksandr Kaleri
Michael Foale
Pedro Duque
Aleksandr Kaleri
Michael Foale
André Kuipers
Delivered Expedition 8/9 crew to ISS. 194 days
Soyuz TMA-4 Soyuz-FG Gennady Padalka
Michael Fincke
André Kuipers
Gennady Padalka
Michael Fincke
Yuri Shargin
Delivered Expedition 9/10 crew to ISS. 187 days
Soyuz TMA-5 Soyuz-FG Salizhan Sharipov
Leroy Chiao
Yuri Shargin
Salizhan Sharipov
Leroy Chiao
Roberto Vittori
Delivered Expedition 10/11 crew to ISS. 192 days
Soyuz TMA-6 Soyuz-FG Sergei Krikalev
John L. Phillips
Roberto Vittori
Sergei Krikalev
John L. Phillips
Gregory Olsen
Delivered Expedition 11/12 crew to ISS. 179 days
Soyuz TMA-7 Soyuz-FG Valeri Tokarev
William S. McArthur
Gregory Olsen
Valeri Tokarev
William S. McArthur
Marcos Pontes
Delivered Expedition 12/13 crew to ISS. 189 days
Soyuz TMA-8 Soyuz-FG Pavel Vinogradov
Jeffrey Williams
Marcos Pontes
Pavel Vinogradov
Jeffrey Williams
Anousheh Ansari
Delivered Expedition 13/14 crew to ISS. 182 days
Soyuz TMA-9 Soyuz-FG Mikhail Tyurin
Michael López-Alegría
Anousheh Ansari
Mikhail Tyurin
Michael López-Alegría
Charles Simonyi
Delivered Expedition 14/15 crew to ISS. 215 days
Soyuz TMA-10 Soyuz-FG Oleg Kotov
Fyodor Yurchikhin
Charles Simonyi
Oleg Kotov
Fyodor Yurchikhin
Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor
Delivered Expedition 15/16 crew to ISS. 196 days
Soyuz TMA-11 Soyuz-FG Yuri Malenchenko
Peggy Whitson
Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor
Yuri Malenchenko
Peggy Whitson
Yi So-yeon
Delivered Expedition 16/17 crew to ISS. 191 days
Soyuz TMA-12 Soyuz-FG Sergey Volkov
Oleg Kononenko
Yi So-yeon
Sergey Volkov
Oleg Kononenko
Richard Garriott
Delivered Expedition 17/18 crew to ISS. 198 days
Soyuz TMA-13 Soyuz-FG Yury Lonchakov
Michael Fincke
Richard Garriott
Yury Lonchakov
Michael Fincke
Charles Simonyi
Delivered Expedition 18/19 crew to ISS. 178 days
Soyuz TMA-14 Soyuz-FG Gennady Padalka
Michael Barratt
Charles Simonyi
Gennady Padalka
Michael Barratt
Guy Laliberté
Delivered Expedition 19/20 crew to ISS. 198 days
Soyuz TMA-15 Soyuz-FG Roman Romanenko
Frank De Winne
Robert Thirsk
Delivered Expedition 20/21 crew to ISS. 6 months
Soyuz TMA-16 Soyuz-FG Maksim Surayev
Jeffrey Williams
Guy Laliberté
Maksim Surayev
Jeffrey Williams
Delivered Expedition 21/22 crew to ISS. 168 days
Soyuz TMA-17 Soyuz-FG Oleg Kotov
Timothy Creamer
Soichi Noguchi
Delivered Expedition 22/23 crew to ISS. 164 days
Soyuz TMA-18 Soyuz-FG Aleksandr Skvortsov
Mikhail Kornienko
Tracy Caldwell Dyson
Delivered Expedition 23/24 crew to ISS. 176 days
Soyuz TMA-19 Soyuz-FG Fyodor Yurchikhin
Shannon Walker
Douglas H. Wheelock
Delivered Expedition 24/25 crew to ISS. 164 days
Soyuz TMA-20 Soyuz-FG Dmitri Kondratyev
Catherine Coleman
Paolo Nespoli
Delivered Expedition 26/27 crew to ISS. 159 days
Soyuz TMA-21 Soyuz-FG Aleksandr Samokutyaev
Andrey Borisenko
Ronald J. Garan Jr.
Delivered Expedition 27/28 crew to ISS. 164 days
Soyuz TMA-22 Soyuz-FG Anton Shkaplerov
Anatoly Ivanishin
Daniel C. Burbank
Delivered Expedition 29/30 crew to ISS. 165 days

References

  1. ^ "Soyuz TMA". astronautix.com. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  2. ^ "Soyuz Trio set for rare Nighttime Landing on Friday".