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by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Jul 22, 2014
When ESA astronaut Tim Peake sets off for his six-month space journey next year, he will be flying under the mission name of Principia. More than 4000 people replied to the call for a mission name earlier this year and Principia was suggested 20 times. The name refers to Isaac Newton's world-changing three-part text on physics, Naturalis Principia Mathematica, describing the principal laws of motion and gravity. Famously pondering why apples fall from trees, Newton wrote down the laws of gravity and laid the basis for working with it, a requirement for spaceflight. Tim Peake will spend six months living in weightlessness, the first time a British-ESA astronaut will visit the International Space Station. "I am delighted with this name that honours one of Britain's most famous scientists," Tim says. "I hope it will also encourage people to observe the world as if for the first time - just as Isaac Newton did. "Our planet Earth is a precious and beautiful place and we all need to safeguard it." Tim will be launched from Russia's Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in November 2015 - and will be able to enjoy Newton's favourite fruit as supply ships arrive at the international space laboratory. One of his aims is to inspire children during his stay in space, in particular by promoting healthy eating. The International Space Station is first and foremost a place of science, and the six astronauts there spend much of their time working on experiments that cannot be done anywhere on Earth. It's a busy time in space for ESA astronauts, with Alexander Gerst currently working in the Station, Samantha Cristoforetti leaving for it in November this year, and Andreas Mogensen being launched shortly before Tim's mission for a 10-day stay on the Station.
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