A stuffed lion is the mascot for American Jeffrey Williams and Russian Maxim Suráyev Canadian Guy Laliberté, the expedition members who will depart on 30 September at the International Space Station (ISS, for its acronym in English).
Suráyev, who will engineer aboard this mission, said the lion will be at the same time "mascot and indicator of weightlessness, when separating the Soyuz propellant third stage. The Russian astronaut said toy is a very endearing: "I have two young daughters, whom I asked to take turns sleeping each night with this lion, that smacked home during the six months that will remain in orbit".
The next expedition to the ISS will be the first in his career, so both daughters, Arina and Ksenia, they will fire him at the Baikonur Cosmodrome, built in the days of the Soviet Union and Russia currently leases in Kazakhstan.
Suráyev takes 13 years for the Russian team of astronauts and said jokingly that probably needed to "grow old like a good cognac. The Canadian Guy Laliberté, founder and president of the company famous Cirque du Soleil, will travel to the ISS as space tourists. In addition to a photo of his newborn grandson and small mementos of his wife and children, Laliberté will be put into orbit nine clown noses to give to all tenants of the station. The most important function is to make propaganda for Laliberté of One Drop philanthropic project aimed at preserving the water resources of the Earth.
For six months in orbit, the new issue should receive the three ISS Progress cargo space, take a hike extravehicular to install Russian research module MIM-2, working with crews of three U.S. shuttles and carry out almost fifty scientific experiments of various lengths.
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