Soyuz MS-24
spaceflight mission to ISS
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Soyuz MS-24
Summary
Soyuz MS-24 is a human spaceflight[1]. It draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (human_spaceflight category, ranking #138 of 226).[2]
Key Facts
- Soyuz MS-24's image is recorded as Soyuz MS-24 Crew.jpg[3].
- Soyuz MS-24's instance of is recorded as human spaceflight[4].
- Soyuz MS-24's instance of is recorded as space mission[5].
- Soyuz MS-24's follows is recorded as Soyuz MS-23[6].
- Soyuz MS-24's followed by is recorded as Soyuz MS-25[7].
- Soyuz MS-24's COSPAR ID is recorded as 2023-143A[8].
- Soyuz MS-24's part of is recorded as Soyuz programme[9].
- Soyuz MS-24's Commons category is recorded as Soyuz MS-24[10].
- Soyuz MS-24's space launch vehicle is recorded as Soyuz-2.1a[11].
- Soyuz MS-24's SCN is recorded as 57862[12].
- Soyuz MS-24's UTC date of spacecraft launch is recorded as +2023-09-15T00:00:00Z[13].
- Soyuz MS-24's significant event is recorded as rocket launch[14].
- Soyuz MS-24's significant event is recorded as landing[15].
- Soyuz MS-24's crew members is recorded as Oleg Kononenko[16].
- Soyuz MS-24's crew members is recorded as Nikolay Chub[17].
- Soyuz MS-24's crew members is recorded as Loral O'Hara[18].
- Soyuz MS-24's crew members is recorded as Oleg Novitskiy[19].
- Soyuz MS-24's crew members is recorded as Marina Vasilevskaya[20].
- Soyuz MS-24's start point is recorded as Baikonur Cosmodrome[21].
- Soyuz MS-24's backup or reserve team or crew is recorded as Aleksey Ovchinin[22].
- Soyuz MS-24's backup or reserve team or crew is recorded as Tracy Caldwell Dyson[23].
Why It Matters
Soyuz MS-24 draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (human_spaceflight category, ranking #138 of 226).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]