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Soyuz TM-33 Taxi crewmembers in the Zvezda Service Module
Soyuz TM-33 was a manned Russian space launch on Oct 21, 2001, on the Soyuz-U launch vehicle. Its mission was to carry a new crew and supplies to the International Space Station.
14th manned mission to ISS.
Soyuz TM-33 is a Russian astronaut-transporting spacecraft that was launched by a Soyuz-U rocket from Baikonur at 08:59 UT on 21 October 2001. It carried two Russian and one French astronaut to the International Space Station (ISS). It docked with the ISS at 10:44 UT on 23 October. This new crew spent eight days on the ISS, and returned on the older Soyuz TM-32 at 04:59 UT on 31 October. The new Soyuz remained docked as a lifeboat craft for the then current crew of three (two Russian and one American) astronauts.
Russia, Russian language, European Space Agency, Space Shuttle, United States
International Space Station, Soviet Union, Human spaceflight, Space Shuttle, Zond program
International Space Station, Space tourism, European Space Agency, Spacecraft, Expedition 2
Germany, Italy, France, United Kingdom, Netherlands
United States, International Space Station, United Kingdom, Virgin Galactic, Space Adventures
Soviet Union, Russia, United States, Canada, United Kingdom
International Space Station, Soyuz programme, Soyuz-TM, Soyuz TM-33, Soyuz TMA-1
Italy, European Space Agency, International Space Station, Viterbo, NASA Astronaut Group 17
France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, United Kingdom
United States, Russia, France, United Nations, European Union