US astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian
cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko have arrived for the start of a 12-month
tour of duty on the International Space Station.
It will be the longest continuous stay anyone has had aboard the 400km-high (250 mile) orbiting platform.
Their Soyuz capsule docked successfully at 01:33 GMT on Saturday, Nasa said.
Scientists hope to get a keener idea of the effects on the human body of living in microgravity for extended periods.
The space agencies say the data will be invaluable as they plan towards eventually mounting a mission to Mars.
Mr
Kelly and Mr Kornienko launched from Baikonur in Kazakhstan in the
Soyuz vehicle at 01:42 local time on Saturday (19:42 GMT Friday).
They were joined on the flight up by cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, but his tour will only last the normal six months.
Although
Mr Kelly and Mr Kornienko will set an endurance record for this space
station, some of the stays aboard the old Russian Mir platform were much
longer.
Four cosmonauts lived on Mir at various times for more
than a year, with Valeri Polyakov spending a mammoth 437.7 days in orbit
in 1994-95.
"The last time we had such a long duration flight was almost 20 years
and of course all… scientific techniques are more advanced than 20
years ago,'' Mr Kornienko was quoted as saying by the AP wire service in
the pre-launch press conference.
"And right now we need to test
the capability of a human being to perform such long-duration flights.
So this is the main objective of our flight - to test ourselves."
Mr
Kelly added: "One of the differences here is that we're doing it as an
international partnership, and if we're going to go beyond low-Earth
orbit again, perhaps to Mars, because of the cost and the complexity it
will most likely be an international mission, so we see this as a
stepping stone to that."
Knowledge on how to mitigate some of the deleterious effects of
living in zero-g has improved markedly since the Mir era, and the
expectation is that Mr Kelly and Mr Kornienko will come back in a better
shape than those early pioneers.
Programmed nutrition and
exercise routines now prevent much of the bone density loss and muscle
weakness that earlier astronauts used to experience.
However,
there are other problems that doctors still need to study and
understand. They have poor data on the effects on immune function, for
example, and there is considerable concern about the damage spaceflight
causes to the eyes. This is a newly recognised phenomenon, and appears
to be related to the way fluid is redistributed in a weightless body.
Pressure is seen to build in the skull and on the optic nerve, and a
large number of astronauts return to Earth complaining that their vision
is not as good as when they went up.
By having Mr Kelly and Mr
Kornienko onboard for a year, the agencies will be able to monitor how
such complications progress beyond the normal six-month tour of duty.
Mr
Kelly's situation is made more interesting by the fact that he has an
identical twin brother, Mark Kelly, who was himself an astronaut before
retiring from the US space agency in 2011.
The pair will be used in a comparative study: one in space, one on the ground.
Relativity
theories predict that Scott Kelly should age less quickly than his
brother while speeding above the Earth - but only by a few milliseconds
over the year.
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