Soyuz spacecraft carrying humanoid robot fails to dock with space station

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Soyuz spacecraft carrying humanoid robot fails to dock with space station

AFP

(UPDATED) The life-size robot, named Fedor, was to spend 10 days learning to assist astronauts in the space station

MOSCOW, Russia – An unmanned spacecraft carrying Russia’s first humanoid robot to be sent into orbit failed to dock automatically at the International Space Station on Saturday, in a new setback for Moscow.

The Soyuz craft had to retreat to a “secure distance” from the ISS, Russian news agencies said, quoting the space flight control centre.

RIA Novosti state news agency quoted a space industry source blaming “failings” with the docking system.

The docking had been scheduled for 0530 GMT but a live broadcast of the event on the website of the Russian space agency Roscosmos was interrupted when the Soyuz approached to about 100 metres (100 yards) off the ISS.

An emergency meeting at the control centre was underway to decide whether to launch another attempt to link up with the space station, the agency said Saturday, August 24.

The life-size robot, named Fedor, was to spend 10 days learning to assist astronauts in the space station.

The life-size robot named Fedor, short for Final Experimental Demonstration Object Research, is the first ever sent up by Russia.

Fedor blasted off Thursday in a Soyuz MS-14 spacecraft from Russia’s Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and was to stay on the ISS until September 7 learning to assist astronauts in the space station.

Soyuz ships are normally manned on such trips, but this time no humans were travelling in order to test a new emergency rescue system.

Instead of cosmonauts, Fedor, also known as Skybot F850, was strapped into a specially adapted pilot’s seat, with a small Russian flag in its hand. 

“Let’s go. Let’s go,” the robot was heard saying during launch, repeating the famous phrase used by the first man in space Yuri Gagarin.

The silvery anthropomorphic robot stands 180 centimeters (6 feet) tall and weighs 160 kilograms (350 pounds). – Rappler.com

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