An unmanned spacecraft has docked with the
International
Space Station, carrying presents, supplies and golfing equipment that could
allow a Russian cosmonaut to hit the longest drive in history.
"The docking went very smoothly. Absolutely no problems," said
Nasa commentator Rob Navias
at
Mission
Control in Houston.
Russian cosmonaut
Pavel
Vinogradov will tee-off from the hull of the Space Station with a golf club
from a Canadian manufacturer as part of an advertising stunt.
Scientists have calculated that the ball could orbit the Earth for four years
before burning up on re-entry.
This is not the first time that golf has made it beyond the gravity well.
Apollo 14
captain
Alan
Shepard became the first space golfer, hitting a ball over two kilometres
with a six-iron strapped to a surveying instrument after slicing his first
shot.
Astronauts on the Space Station also took delivery of Easter presents
including food and DVDs, as well as three satellites made by
MIT which will be used to
practise formation flying in space.
The Progress M-56 that blasted off on Monday from the Russian Space Centre in
Baikonur, Kazakhstan also delivered 2.5 tons of food water, fuel, oxygen and
scientific equipment.
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