Indian Astronauts Enter Last Leg Of Training in Russia

Indian Astronauts Enter Last Leg Of Training in Russia

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Indian Astronauts Enter Last Leg Of Training in Russia

The four Indian astronaut, who began their course in Moscow in February this year are set to enter the last leg of the Russian training. Glavkosmos, which has a contract with ISRO’s Human Spaceflight Centre (HSFC) has saud that the four men shortlisted to go to space as part of India’s Gaganyaan program are scheduled to return at the end of March 2021.

The Indians are undergoing the general space training programme at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre (GCTC) and are also studying the systems of the Soyuz MS crewed spacecraft.

ISRO chairman K Sivan had said that the Russian training is generic and they will be provided Gaganyaan-specific training upon their return. They will have to undergo medical training, psychological training, advanced training, and flight simulation training. The army and navy will help in the survival training.

Dmitry Loskutov, director general, Glavkosmos, said “By the end of November, they should pass tests in the GCTC centrifuge and hyperbaric chamber module. The Indian astronauts are ongoing as scheduled and are set to be completed by the end of the first quarter 2021.”

HSFC and Glavkosmos signed the contract in June 2019 and the Indian astronaut, all of them test pilots of the Indian Air Force (IAF), left for Russia only this year. Glavkosmos had earlier said that the training program would be complex and that all its elements are critically important, because only the combination of all aspects allows preparing a person for a spaceflight.

Loskutov said, “So far, Indian astronauts have accomplished training on crew actions in case of an abnormal descent module landing in the forest and marshy areas in winter, on the water surface and in the steppe in summer.

He added that they have also successfully completed training in short-term weightlessness mode on board the Il-76MDK laboratory aircraft. They were also trained to lift aboard a helicopter while evacuating from the descent module landing point.

“The study of the Russian language, the configuration, structure and systems of the Soyuz crewed spacecraft, as well as medical and physical training are regular courses of their training, and the Indian astronauts currently continue the study,” he said.

While IAF’s Institute of Aerospace Medicine (IAM) in Bangalore will provide some training, the Indian army’s Army Sports Institute (ASI) in Pune and navy’s Institute of Naval Medicine (INM), Mumbai are also expected to be roped in.