like father like son
  • http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20080408/sc_space/fornewstationcommande
    rspaceflightisallinthefamily

    For New Station Commander, Spaceflight is All in the Family

    Veteran cosmonaut Alexander Volkov was in Kazakhstan on Tuesday, at
    the site where he left the Earth three times to live on a space
    station. Though his return to the Baikonur Cosmodrome was for a
    launch and the mission's crew roster included a 'Volkov', his role
    today was as a spectator and proud father.

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    His son, Sergei Volkov, was making his first launch to space.


    The first second-generation space explorer, the younger Volkov, 35,
    commanded the Soyuz TMA-12 spacecraft that was launched at 7:16 a.m.
    EDT (1116 GMT) from the same pad used by his father for his three
    missions between 1985 and 1991.

    Now in space, Sergei Volkov is set to become the next commander of
    the International Space Station, relieving Peggy Whitson, the
    outpost's first female leader.


    Volkov, who launched with fellow Expedition 17 crewmate Oleg
    Kononenko and So-yeon Yi, the first Korean citizen to fly in space,
    did not have the same opportunity as his father did Tuesday to watch
    his family member depart the planet. Up until recently, relatives
    were not allowed at the Russian launch base.


    "I was able [to watch] just the news," Volkov shared with
    collectSPACE.com about his memories at age 12 of watching his
    father's first flight. "As a son, of course, I was worried how this
    launch was going to be," he said, adding that he was also happy that
    his father had reached his goal.


    Twenty years later, the elder Volkov took his son aside to share his
    personal advice for his son's trip. "It happened that he started
    giving me advice maybe two weeks ago," Volkov recounted during a
    January interview. "I visited him and he said, 'You know, I have to
    tell you something.' He shared with me some information about what
    he didn't expect during his first flight and what actually happened."


    Space siblings and spouses


    The Volkovs are the first parent and child pair to both fly in
    space, but they aren't the first blood relatives to share that
    distinction.


    Brothers Mark and Scott Kelly are more than just the first immediate
    family members to both be astronauts but also the first identical
    twins to do so.


    Selected by NASA in 1996 as pilots, both have made two space shuttle
    flights. Mark will command his third when he launches on a mission
    to the space station targeted to begin at the end of May (where
    he'll meet up with Sergei Volkov on orbit).


    Beyond blood relatives, the first husband and wife to fly in space,
    though on separate missions and before they were betrothed to each
    other, were fifth in space Andriyan Nikolayev and Valentina
    Tereshkova, the first woman to orbit the Earth. They were married in
    November 1963, a year after Nikolayev made his first mission and 5
    months after Tereshkova returned from space. They gave birth to a
    daughter before divorcing in 1982.


    The first married couple to launch to space together was U.S.
    astronauts Mark Lee and Jan Davis, who met while training for STS-
    47, his second and her first mission. As the two were already in
    training when they decided to be married, NASA made an exception to
    its normal policies that would preclude such a pairing. They were
    married in 1990, launched in 1991 and separated in 1999.


    Other former married couples include Steve Hawley and Sally Ride,
    the first U.S. female in space, and Ron Sega and Bonnie Dunbar.
    Space shuttle veterans Robert "Hoot" Gibson and Rhea Seddon remain a
    couple, as are Steve Nagel and Linda Godwin, Peter "Jeff" Wisoff and
    Tammy Jernigan, and Andy Thomas and Shannon Walker.


    Former European Space Agency astronauts Jean-Pierre Haignere and
    Claudie Andre-Deshays are married, as are Russians Valeri Ryumin and
    Yelena Kondakova.


    NASA astronaut Bob Behnken carried wedding rings with him on the
    most recent shuttle mission, which he and his fiancee Megan McArthur
    will wear when they are married. McArthur is scheduled to launch on
    her first mission, the last to repair the Hubble Space Telescope,
    later this year.


    Orbiting offspring


    Rather than wedding rings, Volkov considered packing a different
    type of jewelry to represent his connection with his father.

    "He presented me his watches that he wore during his spaceflight.
    Maybe I will fly them as they are certified for space," he told
    collectSPACE.

    By happenstance, Volkov will meet the second, second generation
    space-explorer and the first offspring of a U.S. astronaut late
    during his stay on the station. Self-funded spaceflight participant
    Richard Garriott, the son of Skylab and space shuttle veteran Owen
    Garriott, is expected to launch in October. He and Volkov will then
    return to Earth together.

    One more son of a spaceman is awaiting his ride to orbit. Cosmonaut
    Roman Romanenko is following in the career path of his father, Yuri,
    who launched on three missions. Roman is assigned to fly to the
    station in the fall of 2009.

    NASA will broadcast the docking of Expedition 17 with the ISS live
    on NASA TV Thursday, April 10 beginning at 8:30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT).
    Click here for SPACE.com's NASA TV feed and live ISS mission updates.

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