Sochi 2014 Olympics Torch Heading To Space

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On Thursday, November 7th, 2013, exactly a month after it began its extensive travel schedule, the Sochi Olympics torch will embark on the longest leg of its 40,000-mile relay - a trip to the International Space Station aboard the Soyuz spacecraft along with three new crew members: Russia's Mikhail Tyurin, NASA's Rick Mastracchio and Japan's Koichi Wakata.

Once there, the torch will be carried to the station's various modules and on Saturday, November 9th, taken on a spacewalk by cosmonauts Oleg Kotov and Sergei Ryazanskiy. The astronauts will time their excursion such that the space station is flying over Russia so that videos and photos of the torch will feature Sochi, the venue of the 2014 Winter Olympics in the background. To ensure the safety of the astronauts and conserve the limited oxygen supply, the torch will not be lit at anytime during this expedition.

This is not the first time an Olympic torch has been taken to Space. In 1996, the crew of Space Shuttle Atlantis took aboard the torch for the Atlanta Summer Olympics. However that one never ventured outside the International Space Station.

And while this may be amongst the most exciting excursions that the Sochi Olympic torch will take, it is not the only one. Last month, it traveled to the North Pole aboard a Russian nuclear powered icebreaker. Later this month, it will head to the bottom of Lake Balkai, the world's deepest lake and before it all comes to an end on February 2014, even make its way to the peak of Mount Elbrus - The highest mountain on the European continent.

By the time the torch is brought to the Sochi Olympics stadium on February 7th, 2014, to light the cauldron that marks the beginning of the Games, it will have traveled over 40,000 miles, traversed 2,900 towns and cities and been carried by 14,000 torchbearers. Not surprisingly, it will go down in history as the most extensively traveled Olympics torch and the first, to experience a spacewalk. Also, while most people think that it is a single torch being passed from one torchbearer to another, the reality is that each is provided with his/her own torch which he/she can keep as a memento. That's because the spirit of the Olympics embodies passing the flame, not the torch.

The ritual of lighting a flame with a torch to mark the beginning of the Olympic games was started by the Greek in 776 B.C. when the first games were held at Olympia and continued until they came to a halt, about a thousand years later. However, it did not start immediately when the modern Olympics was born in Athens in 1896. In fact, it took 32 years before the cauldron was finally lit at the 1928 Amsterdam games and another 8 before the first torch relay was conducted for the 1938 Berlin Games. In 1952, Norway staged the first torch relay for the Winter Games and started a new tradition.

Resources: news.yahoo.com, torchrelay.sochi.com,BBC news.com

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188 Comments
  • Shmellyover 10 years
    That is so cool, I might... This is Cool B' )
    • Phover 10 years
      One thing i learned was By the time the torch is brought to the Sochi Olympics stadium on February 7th, 2014, to light the cauldron that marks the beginning of the Games, it will have traveled over 40,000 miles.also
      • yeoslakers
        yeoslakersover 10 years
        yes i would
        • Youover 10 years
          I think it was fasinating that they were able to bring the torch into space. Also that they lit it in and basin that was amazing :-)*
          • ME!over 10 years
            This is a very awesome article!
            • Lexieover 10 years
              It's amazing to find how far people are willing to go for a tradition to be celebrated. I'm glad to know that some people care so much about this, even though I don't pay much attention to any games.
              • Nameover 10 years
                this was a very interesting article. i think its cool that they are sending the torch into space. i cant believe it will have traveled over 40,000 miles.
                • DPover 10 years
                  I think this is going to be interesting and challenging for the people who will be managing the torch. I am looking forward to seeing what they will be doing.
                  • Briona M.over 10 years
                    Great, the winter olympics is back! It's crazy how they have to cross over 2,900 towns and it takes about 123 days. In my opinion, I think its too much stuff wasted on Transportation.
                    • Nina S. over 10 years
                      one thing i learned from this article is that the torch for Sochi Olympics, by the time it makes it to its destination, will havce traveled over 40,000 miles. i also learned that it would have traversed 2,900 towns and cities and have been carreid by 14,000 torchbearers. i am a huge fan of both the summer and winter olympics so this article deffinetly kept my attention.