The launch of the spacecraft looks from orbit
When the Russian Soyuz flew up from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on March 28, Chris Hadfield - Canadian astronaut on the International Space Station (ISS) - recorded the scene with the camera.
If you fly in orbit at the time when Russia's Soyuz spacecraft takes off, you'll see an orange halo flying up.
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The sight of the Soyuz flew up from Baikonur Cosmodrome on March 28. ( Photo: Space)
Spacecraft launches are a fascinating sight for both people on the ground and in space.When the Russian Soyuz flew up from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on March 28, Chris Hadfield - Canadian astronaut on the International Space Station (ISS) - recorded the scene with the camera.From Hadfield's position, the Soyuz rocket was like an orange halo rising from the ground, Space reported.
Hadfield, currently the No. 35 crew commander on ISS, posted a photo on Twitter.
Usually people on ISS cannot observe the airship scene taking off to bring their colleagues into orbit. But the March 28 launch was an exception, because it happened when ISS flew just above the Baikonur space airport. Because the Soyuz vessel left the ground at that time, it arrived in ISS after almost 6 hours, a feat of time compared to previous flights (always lasting for at least two days).
Three astronauts, including Hadfield, will return to Earth in May.
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