Soyuz-FG on the ISS: We are used to seeing perfect depictions of space, in movies and videogamea. So if we ever see something real, it doesn't compare to the space that the film producers show us.
On Thursday, the European Space Agency (ESA) released a video taken through International Space Station (ISS) by astronaut Alexander Gerst. The video shows a time-lapse of the Russian Progress MS-10 spacecraft that took off from Kazakhstan's Baikonur spaceport on November 16.
The footage is almost unbelievable as it shows the spacecraft in a Mission power supply of the ISS, traveling in orbit. The camera on the unmanned Russian spacecraft reveals the curvature of the Earth on a scale never seen before.
"This is real," Alexander Gerst wrote in one tweet with the video. "How a spaceship leaves our planet, as seen by the ISS."
Beyond the incredible footage, the video is particularly significant, as it depicts the first launch of the Russian Soyuz-FG missile into the ISS after a failed mission to transport a crew to the ISS last month. The cause of the mission failure was a sensor that was not working properly. Fortunately not no one was injured.
The November 16 mission was unmanned, but Soyuz-FG will fly again (this time with astronauts) to the ISS since Christmas, according to NASA chief Jim Bridenstine.
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