New Delhi. The group Captain Shubhanshu Shubhanshu Shukla is going to create history through Gaganyaan Mission. The launch for Axiom-4 Mission, which is constantly postponed, is expected to succeed on Wednesday. Shukla will go to ISS ie International Space Station for 14 days under this mission. The special thing is that after the landing of Chandrayaan 3 on the southern pole of the moon in 2023, India will have a second historical achievement.
Shubhanshu Shukla will complete a 14 -day journey of space with astronauts from America, Poland and Hungary. It is reported that during this time he will work to carry forward 7 Indian scientific studies prepared by scientists across the country. It is also being said that he can also talk to Prime Minister Narendra Modi from space and students of Indian schools and colleges.
According to media reports, Space X has reported that the weather is 90 percent favorable for launching. It was written on X, ‘Everything seems fine to launch the AX-4 mission of Axiom Space on Wednesday to the space station and the weather is 90 per cent favorable.’
This is the program
The US space agency NASA said on Tuesday that the launching will take place on 25 June i.e. Wednesday. The agency said, ‘NASA, Axiom Space and SpaceX set a target of early on Wednesday 25 June for the launch of the fourth private astronaut mission’ Axiom Mission 4 ‘for the International Space Station.
The mission will be launched from Florida’s ‘Launch Complex 39A’ of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. NASA said that ‘Docking’ time will be around 7 am on Thursday 26 June (Indian time at 4:30 pm).
The Ex-4 Commercial Mission is headed by Commander Paigi Whitson, with Shukla Mission Pilot and Hungarian astronaut Tibor Kapu and Slavose Uznansky-Visnivsky Mission experts.
Turned program
The launching under this mission was to first take place on May 29, but it was postponed first for June 8, then 10 June and then 11 June after leakage of liquid oxygen leakage in the booster of Falcon-9 rocket and also leakage in the old Russian module of the international space station. After this, the plan was then postponed to June 19 and then the date of launch was fixed by NASA to assess the operation of the orbital laboratory after repair work in the Russian module 22 June.