Soyuz spacecraft launch timelapse seen from space

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This is what three astronauts being launched into space looks like – seen from space. ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst took this time-lapse sequence from the International Space Station’s Cupola observatory on 3 December 2018.

Inside the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft were NASA astronaut Anne McClain, Canadian Space Agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques and Roscosmos astronaut and Soyuz commander Oleg Konenenko. The trio blasted into orbit at 11:31 GMT from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and docked with the International Space Station just six hours later.

Spacecraft are launched after the Space Station flies overhead. This allowed Alexander to set up a camera to take regular pictures at intervals that are played back to create this video.

The rocket leaves behind a trail of exhaust as it gains altitude and passes through the layers of Earth’s atmosphere.

Download the video from ESA’s space in videos: http://www.esa.int/spaceinvideos/Videos/2018/12/Soyuz_spacecraft_launch_timelapse_seen_from_space

Follow Alexander and the #Horizons mission on social media via http://bit.ly/AlexanderGerstESA and on http://bit.ly/HorizonsBlogESA.

Credits: ESA/NASA.

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14 Comments

  1. Awesome Images as the rocket penetrated the Atmosphere, and for some reason, it all reminded of the Sci-Fi Classic,
    Fantastic Voyage (1966). They broke through that last barrier and into a New Frontier.

  2. Why does the camera pick up the light from the Soyuz rocket trail but not the stars ? Serious question does it have anything to do between the two distances of each beam of light from the camera in question ? And also what type of glass is this to take direct uninterrupted sunlight possibly for months if not years at a time ?

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