Progress MS-31 to launch as ISS hosts private crew, prepares for another  handover
Date:
Thu, 03 Jul 2025 17:04:26 +0000
Description:
The International Space Station is in the midst of a transitional period, 
with the crew The post Progress MS-31 to launch as ISS hosts private crew,  prepares for another handover appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
The International Space Station is in the midst of a transitional period, 
with the crew of the privately-operated Axiom Mission 4 aboard for a  multi-week stay as Crew-11 prepares for liftoff in late July. The Progress  MS-31 cargo vehicle is also set to launch to the Station on Thursday, with 
the older Progress MS-29 vehicle having departed for a destructive reentry on  Tuesday. 
 
Progress MS-31 which is loaded with 2,625 kg of cargo for the Station, is  scheduled to launch on Thursday, July 3, at 19:32 UTC from Site 31/6 at the  Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Progress MS-31 will fly on a trajectory  that will take it to a rendezvous and docking with the Russian segments Poisk  module on July 5, approximately 48 hours after liftoff. 
Progress MS-31s cargo includes 1,205 kg of dry cargo  including food,  clothing, and equipment for several science experiments  along with 950 kg of  fuel for the Stations thrusters, 420 kg of drinking water for the crew, and 
50 kg of nitrogen to help replenish the Stations atmosphere. The Progress  MS-31 spacecraft during processing. (Credit: Roscosmos) 
The ISS uses both oxygen and nitrogen to pressurize its crew modules, unlike  earlier crewed spacecraft, such as Mercury, Gemini, or Apollo, which used 
pure oxygen at partial pressure. The Soyuz and Crew Dragon spacecraft also 
use a similar two-gas pressurization system. See Also Progress MS-31 Updates  ISS Section NSF Store Click here to Join L2 
The Soyuz-2-1a rocket that is to fly Progress MS-31 is painted in an unusual  blue and white scheme, as it was originally intended for a Glavkosmos  commercial launch. It is also sporting a logo commemorating the 50th  anniversary of the Apollo-Soyuz mission in July 1975. 
In preparation for the new crafts arrival, Progress MS-29 undocked from the  Poisk module on Tuesday, July 1, at 18:43 UTC after over 220 days docked to  the Station. The spacecraft deorbited later that evening at 22:30 UTC,  carrying trash deposited by the crew to a fiery end in the atmosphere. Its  departure cleared the way for Progress MS-31 to launch. 
NASA maintains separate designations for Progress missions under the ISS  program. Under this system, Progress MS-31 is designated Progress 92, while  the recently-departed Progress MS-29 was Progress 90, and the still-on-orbit  Progress MS-30 is Progress 91. ISS visiting vehicles as of July 1, 2025 after  Progress MS-29s undocking. (Credit: NASA) 
The Russian segments current visiting vehicle complement includes Soyuz 
MS-27, docked to the Prichal module at the end of the Nauka science module,  and Progress MS-30, docked to the Zvezda modules aft port. However, cracks in  the aft docking port area and pressure leaks could force Roscosmos to order  the port sealed off, prohibiting further use by visiting vehicles if the  situation worsens. 
These leaks also caused delays to the launch of the latest crewed flight to  the US segment of the Station: the privately funded Axiom Mission 4 aboard  Crew Dragon Grace. This mission finally launched on June 25 at 2:31 am EDT  (06:31 UTC), docking to the zenith port of the Harmony module at 10:31 UTC on  June 26. The Axiom-4 crew after arrival aboard the ISS. (Credit: NASA) 
Axiom-4s crew: commander and former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, Indian  astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla, Polish and ESA astronaut Slawosz  Uznanski-Wisniewski, and Hungarian Tibor Kapu are now aboard the ISS, joining  the Expedition 73 astronauts for up to two to three weeks on orbit, during  which time they will conduct a number of experiments aboard the outpost. The  Expedition 73 crew arrived aboard the Crew-10 and Souyz MS-27 missions 
earlier this year. 
 Crew Dragon Endurance , Crew-10s spacecraft , is docked at the forward port  of Harmony . Astronauts Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, JAXAs Takuya Onishi, and  Roscosmos Kirill Peskov have been aboard the Station since March 16 and have  about one more month aboard the Station before their return to Earth. 
NASA astronaut Jonny Kim along with Roscosmos Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey  Zubritsky launched on April 8 aboard Soyuz MS-27 and will remain at the ISS  until December. Russia is making its crew rotations longer  eight months  instead of six  reducing the frequency of Soyuz missions from twice a year to  three missions every two years. The current Expedition 73 crew members posing  inside the Zvezda service module in the Russian segment of ISS. (Credit: 
NASA) 
The 11 crew members aboard the ISS, from six different nations, are busy with  experiments and maintenance tasks. Recent science conducted aboard the 
Station includes measuring blood flow in the brain in microgravity, brain  activity for brain-computer interfaces, high-resolution eye scans, and optic  nerve scans. 
Researchers are exploring using vitamin B supplements to protect astronauts  vision in space; astronauts and scientists have reported vision degradation 
as a side effect of long stays in space. Besides the brain and eye  experiments, electrical muscle stimulation as a supplement to exercise,  hyperspectral imagery of landmarks in Mexico and Central America, and a host  of other experiments also were conducted in the last few weeks. 
Expedition 73 is scheduled to last until Soyuz MS-27 leaves the Station on  Dec. 8. Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers completed the first extravehicular  activity (EVA) of this expedition, EVA-93, on May 1 . They are expected to  conduct another spacewalk before they return home. Anne McClain conducting 
the EVA-93 spacewalk. (Credit: NASA) 
EVA-94, which does not currently have a scheduled date, will finish tasks 
left incomplete after EVA-93. The astronauts were unable to install  telescoping booms for two side struts of the ISS Roll Out Solar Array  modification kit attached to the 2B side of the P4 port truss during the  previous spacewalk, so they will use EVA-94 to attempt to finish this work. 
In addition, other EVA-94 tasks include removing H fixtures on the S6  starboard truss, replacing Camera 9 and bringing it back inside the Station,  replacing a light, installing a router, and installing a DC to DC converter  unit jumper cable. 
Crew-11 is the next scheduled crewed flight to ISS, with a no earlier than  (NET) launch date of this month. It will use Crew Dragon Endeavour , which 
was the first Crew Dragon to fly with astronauts aboard, and is expected to  lift off sometime after Axiom Mission 4 has departed the Station. The 
official Crew-11 portrait. (Credit: NASA) 
Crew-11 will be commanded by NASAs Zena Cardman, who had been scheduled to  command Crew-9 before that missions crew size had to be reduced due to the  situation with the Starliner Crewed Flight Test and its uncrewed return to  Earth. Her fellow NASA astronaut Mike Fincke is the mission pilot. This will  be Cardmans first space mission, while Fincke is a veteran astronaut making  his fourth flight. 
JAXAs Kimiya Yui is one of Crew-11s two mission specialists. This will be his  second spaceflight, while Roscosmos Oleg Platonov is making his first.  Following a handover period, Crew-10 will return to Earth with a splashdown  off the US West Coast. 
While the Station and its crew continue their activities, the programs future  is being considered on the ground. Besides the ongoing issues with cracks and  leaks in the Zvezda module, NASA budget deliberations in Congress continue  which could see the programs research and crew visits cut in the near future.  The program is entering its last few years before the Stations scheduled  deorbit in the 2030-31 timeframe. 
 (Lead image: Progress MS-31 on the launch pad before its scheduled launch on  Thursday, July 3, 2025. Credit: Ivan Timoshenko and Roscosmos) 
 
The post Progress MS-31 to launch as ISS hosts private crew, prepares for  another handover appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/07/progress-ms-31-iss/
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