Prichal (ISS module)

Prichal
Prichal as seen during a spacewalk from the Cupola, during January 2022.
Module statistics
Part ofInternational Space Station
Launch date24 November 2021, 13:06:35 UTC
Launch vehicleSoyuz-2.1b / Progress M-UM
Berthed26 November 2021, 15:20:06 UTC (Nauka nadir)
Mass3,890 kg (8,580 lb)
Length4.91 m (16.1 ft)
Diameter3.3 m (11 ft)
Pressurised volume19 m3 (670 cu ft)
Configuration

Diagram of Prichal's exterior from front, while being attached to Progress M-UM.
External image
image icon Prichal module / Progress M-UM launch mission logo

Prichal (Russian: Причал, lit.'pier'), also known as the Uzlovoy Module (UM, Russian: узловой модуль, romanized: Uzlovoy Modool, lit.'Node Module') is a Russian-built component of the International Space Station (ISS). This cylindrical module has six docking ports (forward, aft, port, starboard, zenith, and nadir) to provide additional docking ports for Soyuz and Progress spacecraft, as well as potential future modules.

Prichal was launched on 24 November 2021, at 13:06:35 UTC, atop a Soyuz-2.1b rocket and guided automously into the nadir port of the Nauka module by a Progress M-UM spacecraft attached to the Prichal's nadir port. Once in place, the Progress spacecraft disconnected for a destructive reentry. As of 2024, the forward, aft, port and starboard docking ports remain covered.

Prichal was initially intended to be an element of the now canceled Orbital Piloted Assembly and Experiment Complex (OPSEK).


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