Spaceflight Now STS-102/ISS-5A.1 Quick-Look Data

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Spaceflight Now STS-102/ISS-5A.1 Quick-Look Data STS-102/ISS-5A.1 Quick-Look Data Spaceflight Now spaceflightnow.com Position STS-102 ISS-5A.1 Family DOB STS-102 Hardware and Flight Data Commander Navy. Capt. James Wetherbee, 48 Married/2 11/27/52 STS Mission STS-102/ISS-5A.1 STS-32, 52, 63, 86 Orbiter Discovery/OV-103 (29) Pilot/IV Air Force Lt. Col. James Kelly, 36 Married/4 05/14/64 Payload Crew ferry; MPLM Rookie Launch 06:42:09 AM 03.08.01 MS1/EV3 Andrew Thomas, Ph.D., 49 Single/0 12/18/51 Pad/MLP/FR 39B/MLP-3/FR 2-1 STS-77, 89/Mir7/91 Prime TAL Zaragoza, Spain MS2/FE/EV4 Paul Richards, 36 Married/3 05/20/64 Landing 02:02:00 AM 03.20.01 Rookie Landing Site KSC, Runway 15/33 STS UP ISS Expedition 2 (shuttle up/shuttle down) Duration 11/19:20 ISS-2 CDR Yury Usachev, 43 Married/1 10/09/57 Soyuz TM-18, TM-23, STS-101 Discovery 217/06:17:38 ISS-2/EV1 Mr. James Voss, 52 Married/1 03/03/49 STS Program 894/04:19:22 STS-44, 53, 69, 101 ISS-2/EV2 Air Force Col. Susan Helms, 43 Single/0 02/26/58 MECO Ha/Hp 137 X 36 sm STS-54, 64, 78, 101 OMS Ha/Hp 143 X 121 sm STS DOWN ISS Expedition 1 (Soyuz up/shuttle down) ISS Ha/Hp 235 X 229 (varies) ISS-1 CDR William Shepherd, 51 Married/0 07/26/49 Period 92.3 minutes STS-27, 41, 52, TM-31/ISS-1 Inclination 51.6 degrees ISS-1 Yuri Gidzenko, 38 Married/2 03/26/62 Velocity 17,169 mph Soyuz TM-22, TM-31/ISS-1 EOM Miles 4.86 million ISS-1 Sergei Krikalev, 42 Married/1 08/27/58 EOM Orbits 184 (land on 185) Soyuz TM-7, TM-12, STS-60, STS-88, TM-31/ISS-1 SSMEs (2A) 2056, 2053, 2045 STS-102 Cargo/Element Weights STS-102 Patch ET/SRB 107/BI106-RSRM 78 Software OI-28 Shuttle vehicle at launch 4.52 million lbs Left OMS LP01/32/F8 Shuttle Discovery at launch 219,363 lbs Right OMS RP03/30/F8 Shuttle Discovery at landing 198,507 lbs Forward RCS FRC3/29/F8 Leonardo MPLM (with cargo) 22,265 lbs Airlock External Logistics up 9,663 lbs RMS #301 Logistics down 2,630 lbs Cryo/GN2 5 PRSD/ 6 GN2 Flight Plan (MET and EST) STS-102 Flight Control Personnel STS-102 will be the… 03/08/01 Launch: Wayne Hale Ascent flight director 103rd Shuttle mission since STS-1 0/00:00 06:42 AM EST John Shannon Orbit 1 FD (lead) 2nd Of 7 flights in 2001 03/10/01 ISS docking: Paul Hill Orbit 2 FD 78th Post-Challenger mission 1/17:54 12:36 AM Paul Dye Planning FD 13th Of 88 ISS assembly flights 03/10/01 EVA-1: John McCullough Moscow FD 29th Flight of Discovery 2/17:05 11:47 PM Wayne Hale Entry FD 45th Launch off pad 39B 03/12/01 MPLM berth: 78th Day launch 3/17:35 12:17 AM Rick La Brode ISS Orbit 1 FD (lead) 34th Day launch off pad 39B 03/12/01 EVA-2: Sally Davis ISS Orbit 2 FD 18th 51.6-degree inclination 4/17:05 11:47 PM Robert Castle ISS Orbit 3 FD 54th Planned KSC landing 03/17/01 ISS undocking: 17th Night landing 9/16:15 10:57 PM Mike Leinbach KSC launch director 12th Night landing at KSC 03/20/01 Landing: TBD KSC NTD 15.12 Years since 51L (at launch) 11/19:20 02:02 AM TBD KSC weather pilot 5,517.79 Days since 51L Rev. C (03/07/01) Compiled by William Harwood.
Recommended publications
  • Expedition 11, Space Tourist Back on Earth 11 October 2005
    Expedition 11, Space Tourist Back on Earth 11 October 2005 The Soyuz TMA spacecraft undocked from the station at 5:49 p.m. EDT. Its re-entry was flawless. It brought the three men aboard to a landing about 53 miles northeast of Arkalyk after 179 days and 23 minutes in space for the E11 crew. The recovery team reached the capsule in minutes. Krikalev and Phillips will spend several weeks in Star City, near Moscow, for debriefing and medical examinations. They launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan last April 14. During their increment they performed a spacewalk, continued station maintenance and did scientific experiments. While aboard the station, Krikalev became the world's most experienced spacefarer. On Aug. 16 The Expedition 11 landed back on Earth Monday his cumulative time in space passed the record of at 9:09 p.m. EDT after undocking from the 747 days, 14 hours and 14 minutes set by international space station at 5:49 p.m. EDT. Cosmonaut Sergei Avdeyev. Krikalev previously Commander Sergei Krikalev, Flight Engineer John had completed two long-duration spaceflights Phillips and Spaceflight Participant US millionaire aboard the Mir space station, served as a member businessman Greg Olsen boarded a Soyuz TMA-6 of the Expedition 1 crew of the space station and Monday afternoon for re-entry in Kazakhstan. flown two space shuttle missions. The station's new crewmembers arrived at the By Monday's landing, Krikalev's cumulative time in station on Oct. 3. Expedition 12 Commander Bill space had reached 803 days and 9 hours and 39 McArthur and Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev will minutes.
    [Show full text]
  • XXIX Congress Report XXIX Planetary Congress • Austria • 2016 Photos: OEWF
    XXIX Congress Report XXIX Planetary Congress • Austria • 2016 Photos: OEWF 1 John-David Bartoe, 2 Alexander Ivanchenkov, 3 Ulrich Walter, 4 Gerhard Thiele, 5 Georgi Iva- nov, 6 Yuri Gidzenko, 7 Bertalan Farkas, 8 Kevin Ford, 9 Pavel Vinogradov, 10 Charlie Walker, 11 Kimiya Yui, 12 Anatoli Artsebarskii, 13 Shannon Lucid, 14 Reinhold Ewald, 15 Claudie Haigneré, 16 Joe Acaba, 17 Ernst Messerschmid, 18 Jan Davis, 19 Franz Viehbock, 20 Loren Shriver, 21 Miroslaw Hermaszewski. 22 Sultan bin Salman al-Saud, 23 Yang Liwei, 24 Richard Garriott, 25 Mark Brown, 26 Carl Walz, 27 Bill McArthur, 28 Owen Garriott, 29 Anna Fisher, 30 George Zam- ka, 31 Rick Hieb, 32 Jerry Ross, 33 Alexander Volkov, 34 André Kuipers, 35 Jean-Pierre Haign- eré, 36 Toktar Aubakirov, 37 Kay Hire, 38 Michael Fincke, 39 John Fabian, 40 Pedro Duque, 41 Michael Foreman, 42 Sergei Avdeev, 43 Vladimir Kovolyonok, 44 Alexandar Aleksandrov, 45 Alexander Alexandrov, 46 Drew Feustel, 47 Dumitru Prunariu, 48 Alexei Leonov, 49 Rusty Sch- weickart, 50 Klaus-Dietrich Flade, 51 Anton Shkaplerov, 52 Alexander Samokutyaev, 53 Sergei Krikalev, 54 Viktor Savinykh, 55 Soichi Noguchi, 56 Bonnie Dunbar, 57 Vladimir Aksyonov, 58 Scott Altman, 59 Yuri Baturin, 60 Susan Helms, 61 Ulf Merbold, 62 Stephanie Wilson, 63 Chiaki Mukai, 64 Charlie Camarda, 65 Julie Payette, 66 Dick Richards, 67 Yuri Usachev, 68 Michael Lo- pez-Alegria, 69 Jim Voss, 70 Rex Walheim, 71 Oleg Atkov, 72 Bobby Satcher, 73 Valeri Tokarev, 74 Sandy Magnus, 75 Bo Bobko, 76 Helen Sharman, 77 Susan Kilrain, 78 Pam Melroy, 79 Janet Kavandi, 80 Tony Antonelli, 81 Sergei Zalyotin, 82 Frank De Winne, 83 Alexander Balandin, 84 Sheikh Muszaphar, 85 Christer Fuglesang, 86 Nikolai Budarin, 87 Salizhan Sharipov, 88 Vladimir Titov, 89 Bill Readdy, 90 Bruce McCandless II, 91 Vyacheslav Zudov, 92 Brian Duffy, 93 Randy Bresnik, 94 Oleg Artemiev XXIX Planetary Congress • Austria • 2016 One hundred and four astronauts and cosmonauts from 21 nations gathered Oc- tober 3-7, 2016 in Vienna, Austria for the XXIX Planetary Congress of the Associa- tion of Space Explorers.
    [Show full text]
  • IAF-01-T.1.O1 Progress on the International Space Station
    https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20150020985 2019-08-31T05:38:38+00:00Z IAF-01-T.1.O1 Progress on the International Space Station - We're Part Way up the Mountain John-David F. Bartoe and Thomas Holloway NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, USA The first phase of the International Space Station construction has been completed, and research has begun. Russian, U.S., and Canadian hardware is on orbit, ard Italian logistics modules have visited often. With the delivery of the U.S. Laboratory, Destiny, significant research capability is in place, and dozens of U.S. and Russian experiments have been conducted. Crew members have been on orbit continuously since November 2000. Several "bumps in the road" have occurred along the way, and each has been systematically overcome. Enormous amounts of hardware and software are being developed by the International Space Station partners and participants around the world and are largely on schedule for launch. Significant progress has been made in the testing of completed elements at launch sites in the United States and Kazakhstan. Over 250,000 kg of flight hardware have been delivered to the Kennedy Space Center and integrated testing of several elements wired together has progressed extremely well. Mission control centers are fully functioning in Houston, Moscow, and Canada, and operations centers Darmstadt, Tsukuba, Turino, and Huntsville will be going on line as they are required. Extensive coordination efforts continue among the space agencies of the five partners and two participants, involving 16 nations. All of them continue to face their own challenges and have achieved significant successes.
    [Show full text]
  • High Altitude Nuclear Detonations (HAND) Against Low Earth Orbit Satellites ("HALEOS")
    High Altitude Nuclear Detonations (HAND) Against Low Earth Orbit Satellites ("HALEOS") DTRA Advanced Systems and Concepts Office April 2001 1 3/23/01 SPONSOR: Defense Threat Reduction Agency - Dr. Jay Davis, Director Advanced Systems and Concepts Office - Dr. Randall S. Murch, Director BACKGROUND: The Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) was founded in 1998 to integrate and focus the capabilities of the Department of Defense (DoD) that address the weapons of mass destruction (WMD) threat. To assist the Agency in its primary mission, the Advanced Systems and Concepts Office (ASCO) develops and maintains and evolving analytical vision of necessary and sufficient capabilities to protect United States and Allied forces and citizens from WMD attack. ASCO is also charged by DoD and by the U.S. Government generally to identify gaps in these capabilities and initiate programs to fill them. It also provides support to the Threat Reduction Advisory Committee (TRAC), and its Panels, with timely, high quality research. SUPERVISING PROJECT OFFICER: Dr. John Parmentola, Chief, Advanced Operations and Systems Division, ASCO, DTRA, (703)-767-5705. The publication of this document does not indicate endorsement by the Department of Defense, nor should the contents be construed as reflecting the official position of the sponsoring agency. 1 Study Participants • DTRA/AS • RAND – John Parmentola – Peter Wilson – Thomas Killion – Roger Molander – William Durch – David Mussington – Terry Heuring – Richard Mesic – James Bonomo • DTRA/TD – Lewis Cohn • Logicon RDA – Les Palkuti – Glenn Kweder – Thomas Kennedy – Rob Mahoney – Kenneth Schwartz – Al Costantine – Balram Prasad • Mission Research Corp. – William White 2 3/23/01 2 Focus of This Briefing • Vulnerability of commercial and government-owned, unclassified satellite constellations in low earth orbit (LEO) to the effects of a high-altitude nuclear explosion.
    [Show full text]
  • STS-108/ISS-UF1 Quick-Look Data Spaceflight Now
    STS-108/ISS-UF1 Quick-Look Data Spaceflight Now Rank/Seats STS-108 ISS-UF1 Family/TIS DOB STS-108 Hardware and Flight Data Commander Navy Capt. Dominic L. Gorie M/2 05/02/57 STS Mission STS-108/ISS-UF1 Up 44; STS-91,99 25.8 * Orbiter Endeavour (17th flight) Pilot/IV Navy Lt. Cmdr. Mark Kelly M/2 02/21/64 Payload Crew transfer; ISS resupply Up 37; Rookie 4.75 Launch 05:19:28 PM 12.05.01 MS1/EV1 Linda Godwin, Ph.D. M/2 07/02/52 Pad/MLP 39B/MLP1 Up/Down-5 49; STS-37,59,76 31.15 Prime TAL Zaragoza MS2/EV2/FE Daniel Tani M/0 02/01/61 Landing 01:03:00 PM 12.17.01 Up 40; Rookie 4.75 Landing Site Kennedy Space Center Duration 11/19:44 ISS-4 Air Force Col. Carl Walz M/2 09/06/55 Down-5 46; STS-51,65,79 39.25 Endeavour 167/13:26:34 ISS-4 CIS AF Col. Yuri Onufrienko M/3 02/06/61 STS Program 943/13:26:34 Down-6 40; Mir-21 197.75 ISS-4 Navy Capt. Daniel Bursch M/4 07/25/57 MECO Ha/Hp 169 X 40 nm Down-7 44; STS-51,68,77 35.85 OMS Ha/Hp 175 X 105 nm ISS Ha/Hp 235 X 229 (varies) ISS-3 Frank Culbertson M/5 05/15/49 Period 91.6 minutes Down-6 52; STS-38, 51,ISS-3 136.89 Inclination 51.6 degrees ISS-3 Mikhail Tyurin M/1 03/02/60 Velocity 17,212 mph Down-7 40; ISS-3 122.59 EOM Miles 4,467,219 miles ISS-3 CIS Lt.
    [Show full text]
  • Spaceflight Now STS-98/ISS Stage 5A Quick-Look Data
    STS-98/ISS Stage 5A Quick-Look Data Spaceflight Now spaceflightnow.com Position ISS-1 (Soyuz Up/STS Down) Family DOB STS-98 Hardware and Flight Data Commander William Shepherd, 51 Married/0 07/26/49 STS Mission STS-98/ISS-5A (102nd flt) STS-27, 41, 52, Soyuz TM-31 Orbiter Atlantis/OV-104 (23) Soyuz Pilot Yuri Gidzenko, 38 Married/2 03/26/62 Payload Destiny laboratory module Soyuz TM-22, TM-31 Launch 02/07 06:13 PM Engineer Sergei Krikalev, 42 Married/1 08/27/58 Pad/MLP/FR LC-39A/MLP-2/LCC-2 Soyuz TM-7, TM-12, STS-60, STS-88, TM-31 Prime TAL Zaragoza, Spain Landing 12:53:08 PM 02.18.01 Position STS-98 ISS-5A Family DOB Landing Site KSC, Runway 15/33 Duration 10/18:40 Commander Mr. Kenneth Cockrell, 50 Single/2 04/09/50 STS-56, 69, 80 Atlantis 172/13:51:51 Pilot/IV Mr. Mark Polansky, 44 Single/0 06/02/56 STS Program 881/06:59:19 Rookie MS1/EV2 Navy Cmdr. Robert Curbeam, 38 Married/2 03/05/62 MECO Ha/Hp 194 X 46 statute miles STS-85 OMS Ha/Hp 201 X 121 MS2/RMS/FE Ms. Marsha Ivins, 49 Single/0 04/15/51 ISS Ha/Hp 235 X 229 (varies) STS-32, 46, 62, 81 Period 92.3 minutes MS3/EV1 Thomas Jones, Ph.D., 46 Single/0 01/22/55 Inclination 51.6 degrees STS-59, 68, 80 Velocity 17,169 mph EOM Miles 4.5 million STS/Payload Weights at Launch/Landing STS-98 Mission Patch EOM Orbits 170 (land on 171) STS System at Launch 4.5 million lbs SSMEs (2A) 2052/2044/2047 STS and Payload at Launch 254,694 lbs ET/SRB ET-106/BI105-RSRM 77 STS and Payload at Landing 198,909 lbs Software OI-28 Destiny Laboratory Module 32,000 lbs Left OMS LP-03/27/F3 Lab Dimensions 14
    [Show full text]
  • Expedition 8 MISSION OVERVIEW
    Expedition 8 MISSION OVERVIEW To Improve Life Here, Science Comes to the Forefront To Extend Life to There, To Find Life Beyond. Experiments from earlier expeditions will Education Payload Operations (EPO) remain aboard the International Space include three educational activities that That is NASAs vision. Station (ISS), continuing to benefit from will focus on demonstrating science, long-term exposure to microgavity, and mathematics, technology, engineering or Michael Foale, additional studies in the life and physical geography principles. Expedition 8 Commander, NASA ISS sciences and space technology development Group Activation Packs -- YEAST will Science Officer: will be added. evaluate the role of individual genes in the When we look back fifty years to this time, we Most of the research complement for response of yeast to space flight conditions. wont remember the experiments that were Expedition 8 will be carried out with The results of this research could help performed, we wont remember the assembly scientific research facilities and samples clarify how mammalian cells grow under that was done, we may barely remember any already on board the Space Station. microgravity conditions and determine if individuals. What we will know was that countries Additional experiments are being evaluated genes are altered. came together to do the first joint international and prepared to take advantage of the Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, project, and we will know that that was the seed limited cargo space on the Soyuz or Reorient, Experimental Satellites that started us off to the moon and Mars. Progress vehicles. The research agenda for (SPHERES) will allow scientists to study the expedition remains flexible.
    [Show full text]
  • Agent Based Modeling of Collaboration and Work Practices Onboard the International Space Station
    https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20020063473 2020-07-22T18:34:32+00:00Z Agent Based Modeling of Collaboration and Work Practices Onboard the International Space Station Alessandro A cquisti School of Information Management and Systems, UC Berkeley 102 South Hall Berkeley, CA 94720 510-823-5008 [email protected] Maarten Sierhuis RIACS, NASA Ames Research Center T35B-1 Moffett Field, CA 94035 650-604-4917 msierhuis @mail. arc. nasa. gov William J. Clancev NASA Ames Research Center & Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, University of West Florida MS 269-3 Moffett Field, CA 94035 650-604-2526 [email protected] Jeffrey M. Bradshaw Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, University of West Florida 40 S. Alcaniz Pensacola, FL 32501 850-202-4422 [email protected] Keywords: Agent-Based Social Simulations, International Space Station, Human-Computer Interaction. ABSTRACT: The International Space Station is one the most complex projects ever, with numerous interdependent constraints affecting productivity and crew safety. This requires planning years before crew expeditions, and the use of sophisticated scheduling tools. Human work practices, however, are difficult to study and represent within traditional planning tools. We present an agent-based model and simulation of the activities and work practices of astronauts onboard the ISS based on an agent-oriented approach. The model represents "a day in the life" of the ISS crew and is developed in Brahms--an agent-oriented, activity-based language used to model knowledge in situated action and learning in human activities. 1. Introduction ship logs highlight recurring discrepancies between planned crew activities and the reality of onboard life.
    [Show full text]
  • The Flight Plan
    M A R C H 2 0 2 1 THE FLIGHT PLAN The Newsletter of AIAA Albuquerque Section The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics AIAA ALBUQUERQUE MARCH 2021 SECTION MEETING: MAKING A DIFFERENCE A T M A C H 2 . Presenter. Lt. Col. Tucker Hamilton Organization USAF F-35 Developmental Test Director of Operations INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Abstract I humbly present my flying experiences through SECTION CALENDAR 2 pictures and videos of what it takes and what it is like to be an Experimental Fighter Test Pilot. My personal stories include NATIONAL AIAA EVENTS 2 major life-threatening aircraft accidents, close saves, combat SPACE NUCLEAR PROPULSION REPORT 3 flying revelations, serendipitous opportunities testing first of its kind technology, flying over 30 aircraft from a zeppelin to a ALBUQUERQUE DECEMBER MEETING 5 MiG-15 to an A-10, and managing the Joint Strike Fighter De- velopmental Test program for all three services. Through ALBUQUERQUE JANUARY MEETING 6 these experiences you will learn not just what a Test Pilot does, but also gain encour- ALBUQUERQUE FEBRUARY MEETING 7 agement through my lessons learned on how to make a difference in your local com- munities…did I mention cool flight test videos! CALL FOR SCIENCE FAIR JUDGES 9 Lt Col Tucker "Cinco" Hamilton started his Air Force career as an CALL FOR SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS 10 operational F-15C pilot. He supported multiple Red Flag Exercises and real world Operation Noble Eagle missions where he protect- NEW AIAA HIGH SCHOOL MEMBERSHIPS 10 ed the President of the United States; at times escorting Air Force One.
    [Show full text]
  • Expedition 11 Opening the Door for Return to Flight
    EXPEDITION 11 OPENING THE DOOR FOR RETURN TO FLIGHT When the crew of STS-114, the mission that The Expedition 11 crew of Krikalev, the will return the Space Shuttle to fl ight, arrives expedition and Soyuz Commander, and at the International Space Station, Russian Phillips, the Flight Engineer and ISS Science Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev and American Offi cer, began their six-month mission to the Astronaut John Phillips, will be ready to ISS with a lift-off April 15, 2005, aboard a welcome them onboard the orbiting outpost. Soyuz spacecraft launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Once they arrived at the Space Station, the new team replaced the Expedition 10 crew of Leroy Chiao and Salizhan Sharipov, who had been aboard the ISS since Oct. 15, 2004. Joining the Expedition 11 crew aboard Soyuz TMA-6 was European Space Agency Astronaut Roberto Vittori, an Italian Air Force pilot. He spent eight days on the Station, conducting a variety of experiments before returning home with Chiao and Sharipov. During the Expedition 11 mission, 15 scientifi c investigations are planned, most of which United Space Alliance Training Team member Oscar focus on how the human body changes and Koehler, left, assists Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, adapts to the microgravity environment of Orbiting 221 miles above the Earth, the International Space Station is seen with the Port One truss and right, and astronaut John Phillips as they participate space. Starboard One truss in place. in a training session in the Johnson Space Center’s Virtual Reality Lab. This type of computer training The ISS experiments are part of a step-by-step and beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2019–2020
    annual report 2019–2020 Energy Solutions for the Decisive Decade M OUN KY T C A I O N R IN S T E Rocky Mountain Institute Annual Report 2019/2020TIT U1 04 Letter from Our CEO 08 Introducing RMI’s New Global Programs 10 Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Contents. 2 Rocky Mountain Institute Annual Report 2019/2020 Cover image courtesy of Unsplash/Cassie Matias 14 54 Amory Lovins: Making the Board of Trustees Future a Reality 22 62 Think, Do, Scale Thank You, Donors! 50 104 Financials Our Locations Rocky Mountain Institute Annual Report 2019/2020 3 4 Rocky Mountain Institute Annual Report 2019/2020 Letter from Our CEO There is no doubt that humanity has been dealt a difficult hand in 2020. A global pandemic and resulting economic instability have sown tremendous uncertainty for now and for the future. Record- breaking natural disasters—hurricanes, floods, and wildfires—have devastated communities resulting in deep personal suffering. Meanwhile, we have entered the decisive decade for our Earth’s climate—with just ten years to halve global emissions to meet the goals set by the Paris Agreement before we cause irreparable damage to our planet and all life it supports. In spite of these immense challenges, when I reflect on this past year I am inspired by the resilience and hope we’ve experienced at Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI). This is evidenced through impact made possible by the enduring support of our donors and tenacious partnership of other NGOs, companies, cities, states, and countries working together to drive a clean, prosperous, and secure low-carbon future.
    [Show full text]
  • ISS Spacewalk History Spacecalc
    CBS News/Spaceflight Now U.S. Spacewalk Statistics 9/15/06 ISS Spacewalk History SpaceCalc Expedition EVAs HH MM # Astronaut/Cosmonaut EVAs HH MM 0 Expedition 1 00 00 1 Anatoly Solovyov 16 77 41 1 Expedition 2 2001 00 19 2 Jerry Ross 9 58 18 4 Expedition 3 2001 18 40 3 Steven Smith 7 49 48 3 Expedition 4 2001-2002 17 49 4 Joe Tanner 7 46 29 2 Expedition 5 2002 09 46 5 Nikolai Budarin 9 46 14 2 Expedition 6 2003 13 17 6 James Newman 6 43 13 0 Expedition 7 00 00 7 Talgat Musabayev 8 43 02 1 Expedition 8 2004 03 55 8 Yuri Onufrienko 8 42 52 4 Expedition 9 2004 15 45 9 Sergei Avdeyev 10 41 59 2 Expedition 10 2004-2005 09 58 10 Piers Sellers 6 41 10 1 Expedition 11 2005 04 58 11 Sergei Krikalev 8 41 08 2 Expedition 12 2005-2006 11 05 12 Victor Afanaseyev 7 38 33 2 Expedition 13 2006 12 25 13 Vladimir Dezhurov 9 37 56 0 Expedition 14 00 00 14 John Grunsfeld 5 37 32 0 Expedition 15 00 00 15 Leroy Chiao 6 36 16 0 Expedition 16 00 00 16 Musa Manarov 7 34 32 0 Expedition 17 00 00 17 Mike Lopez-Alegria 5 33 58 18 Pavel Vinogradov 6 32 50 24 TOTAL ISS Expedition EVA Time 117 57 19 Yury Usachev 7 31 48 20 Tom Akers 4 29 41 28 Total STS-based ISS EVAs 187 20 21 Story Musgrave 4 26 19 44 Total ISS-based ISS/STS EVAs 251 16 22 Mark Lee 4 26 01 Shortest ISS EVA (U.S.
    [Show full text]