Expedition 15 Press

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Expedition 15 Press TABLE OF CONTENTS Section Page Mission Overview ............................................................................................................ 1 Expedition 15 Crew ......................................................................................................... 7 Expedition 14 Spacewalks.............................................................................................. 13 Russian Soyuz TMA ........................................................................................................ 17 Soyuz Booster Rocket Characteristics ......................................................................... 23 Prelaunch Countdown Timeline ................................................................................... 24 Ascent/Insertion Timeline ............................................................................................. 25 Orbital Insertion to Docking Timeline............................................................................ 26 Key Times for Expedition 15/14 International Space Station Events............................ 31 EXPEDITION 14/ISS SOYUZ 13 (TMA-9) LANDING................................................... 33 Soyuz Entry Timeline ................................................................................................... 36 European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicle Debuts ................................ 41 International Space Station: Expedition 15 Science Overview.................................... 51 The Payload Operations Center ..................................................................................... 61 ISS 15 Russian Research Objectives............................................................................. 65 U.S. Experiments ............................................................................................................. 73 The Digital NASA Television........................................................................................... 117 Expedition 15 PAO Contacts .......................................................................................... 119 i ii Mission Overview Expedition 15: Expanding for Science On April 7, two Russian cosmonauts Making his second flight into space, Fyodor aboard the Soyuz TMA-10 will launch to the Yurchikhin (Fee-OH'-dur YOUR’-cheek-in), International Space Station, joining an 48, will command the Expedition 15 mis- American astronaut for one of the most sion. He is an engineer for RSC-Energia complex expeditions since permanent hu- who flew on the STS-112 mission that de- man occupancy of the complex began al- livered the starboard one (S1) truss to the most seven years ago. outpost. Cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin of Russia's Federal Space Agency, Expedition 15 commander. 1 Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, representing Russia's Federal Space Agency, has been assigned as Expedition 15 flight engineer and Soyuz commander. Joining Yurchikhin is fellow Russian cos- tle Endeavour's mission STS-118. That monaut Oleg Kotov (AH’-leg KO’-tuff), 41, flight will carry Expedition 15 crew member who will serve as flight engineer and Soyuz and NASA astronaut Clayton Anderson, 48, commander for launch, landing and on-orbit to the complex. He will return home aboard operations. This is Kotov’s first flight. He is Atlantis on mission STS-120. a cosmonaut-researcher and medical doc- tor for the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training The Soyuz TMA-10 spacecraft will launch Center in Star City, Russia. Their stay from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakh- aboard the station is expected to last ap- stan for a two-day flight to link up to the proximately six months. Zvezda Service Module on the station. Joining them on the Soyuz is U.S. busi- Yurchikhin and Kotov will join NASA astro- nessman Charles Simonyi, 58, a former ex- naut and Navy Cmdr. Sunita (Suni) Wil- ecutive with Microsoft Corp., who will spend liams, 41, who flew to the station on shuttle 10 days on the station under a contract Discovery’s STS-116 mission in December signed with the Russian Federal Space 2006. She will return to Earth aboard shut- Agency (Roscosmos). 2 Charles Simonyi will fly as a space flight participant on the Expedition 15 mission. Simonyi will return to Earth on the Soyuz receive proficiency training on the Cana- TMA-9 capsule with Expedition 14 Com- darm2 robotic arm from the resident crew mander Mike Lopez-Alegria (Ah-luh-GREE’- and engage in safety briefings as well as uh), 48, and Flight Engineer and Soyuz payload and scientific equipment training. Commander Mikhail Tyurin (Tee-YOUR’-in), 47, landing in central Kazakhstan. Lopez- The change of command ceremony marks Alegria and Tyurin have been aboard the the formal control of the station by Yur- station since September 2006. chikhin and Kotov just days before the Ex- pedition 14 crew members and Simonyi de- Once on board, Yurchikhin and Kotov will part the station. Tyurin, at the controls of conduct more than a week of handover ac- Soyuz, Lopez-Alegria and Simonyi will land tivities with Lopez-Alegria, Tyurin and Wil- in the steppes of Kazakhstan to conclude liams, familiarizing themselves with station their mission. Simonyi’s mission will span systems and procedures. They also will 12 days. 3 After landing, the trio will be flown from Ka- nology demonstrations. Many experiments zakhstan to the Gagarin Cosmonaut Train- are designed to gather information about ing Center in Star City, for approximately the effects of long-duration spaceflight on two weeks of initial physical rehabilitation. the human body, which will help with plan- Due to the brevity of his fight, Simonyi will ning future exploration missions to the spend significantly less time acclimating moon and Mars. The science team at the himself to Earth’s gravity than Tyurin and Payload Operations Integration Center at Lopez-Alegria. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., will operate some experi- The crew will work with experiments across ments without crew input and other experi- a wide variety of fields, including human life ments are designed to function autono- sciences, physical sciences and Earth ob- mously. servation, as well as education and tech- Backdropped by a sprinkling of small clouds over a blue Earth, an unpiloted Progress supply vehicle approaches the International Space Station. 4 The station crew is expected to greet the segment to the station and replace a failed arrival of two Russian Progress resupply control moment gyroscope. Additionally, cargo ships filled with food, fuel, water and the shuttle will fly Anderson to the complex, supplies that will augment the delivery of replacing Williams. Further, the mission will supplies on visiting shuttles. The ISS Pro- highlight the first flight of Educator Astro- gress 25 cargo is targeted to reach the sta- naut and Mission Specialist Barbara Mor- tion in May, and ISS Progress 26 is slated gan, who will be part of Endeavour’s crew for August. If all goes as planned, the Ex- and will handle crucial robotics work pedition 15 crew also will greet two visiting throughout the flight. shuttles. Other mission tasks include using the During the STS-117 mission, Atlantis will Canadarm2 robotic arm in August to move deliver the starboard three and four (S3/S4) one of the station’s docking ports, the Pres- truss and a new set of solar arrays to the surized Mating Adapter-3 (PMA-3), from the station. The mission was scheduled for port side of the Unity module to the nadir Expedition 14, but was postponed due to side, clearing the port side for the tempo- hail damage to Atlantis’ external fuel tank rary installation of Harmony (Node 2) during on Feb 26. the STS-120 mission targeted for later this year. The next shuttle mission, Endeavour’s STS- 118, will bring the starboard five (S5) truss Astronaut Clayton C. Anderson (left), Expedition 15 flight engineer; cosmonauts Fyodor N. Yurchikhin and Oleg V. Kotov, commander and flight engineer, respectively, representing Russia's Federal Space Agency, participate in a training session in the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) near Johnson Space Center. 5 U.S. and Russian specialists are reviewing vicer, which was attached to the P6 truss to the tasks expected to be included in as replenish ammonia for cooling lines for the many as three spacewalks planned for Ex- early thermal control system for the station. pedition 15. Yurchikhin and Kotov will do That temporary system has been shut down the first two spacewalks out of the Pirs air- in favor of the station’s permanent cooling lock on the station's Russian segment. system, and the ammonia reservoir is no They will wear Russian Orlan suits and in- longer required. stall micrometeoroid debris shields on the Zvezda module that were delivered to the Anderson and Yurchikhin also will discon- complex in December on the STS-116 shut- nect electrical connections between PMA-3 tle mission. Yurchikhin, Kotov and Ander- and Unity in advance of its relocation and son will conduct their first spacewalks dur- install equipment for additional video hard- ing Expedition 15. ware that will accompany future station as- sembly missions. The third spacewalk will feature Anderson and Yurchikhin in U.S. suits exiting from the Also on the crew’s agenda is work with Quest airlock. They will jettison an ammo- Canadarm2 that will support the space- nia reservoir tank, the Early Ammonia Ser- walks and observe the station’s exterior. 6 Expedition 15 Crew Fyodor Yurchikhin, Ph.D., Expedition 15 commander Since graduating from the Sergei neer for the Shuttle-Mir and
Recommended publications
  • Soyuz TMA-11 / Expedition 16 Manuel De La Mission
    Soyuz TMA-11 / Expedition 16 Manuel de la mission SOYUZ TMA-11 – EXPEDITION 16 Par Philippe VOLVERT SOMMAIRE I. Présentation des équipages II. Présentation de la mission III. Présentation du vaisseau Soyuz IV. Précédents équipages de l’ISS V. Chronologie de lancement VI. Procédures d’amarrage VII. Procédures de retour VIII. Horaires IX. Sources A noter que toutes les heures présentes dans ce dossier sont en heure GMT. I. PRESENTATION DES EQUIPAGES Equipage Expedition 15 Fyodor YURCHIKHIN (commandant ISS) Lieu et Lieu et date de naissance : 03/01/1959 ; Batumi (Géorgie) Statut familial : Marié et 2 enfants Etudes : Graduat d’économie à la Moscow Service State University Statut professionnel: Ingénieur et travaille depuis 1993 chez RKKE Roskosmos : Sélectionné le 28/07/1997 (RKKE-13) Précédents vols : STS-112 (07/10/2002 au 18/10/2002), totalisant 10 jours 19h58 Oleg KOTOV(ingénieur de bord) Lieu et date de naissance : 27/10/1965 ; Simferopol (Ukraine) Statut familial : Marié et 2 enfants Etudes : Doctorat en médecine obtenu à la Sergei M. Kirov Military Medicine Academy Statut professionnel: Colonel, Russian Air Force et travaille au centre d’entraînement des cosmonautes, le TsPK Roskosmos : Sélectionné le 09/02/1996 (RKKE-12) Précédents vols : - Clayton Conrad ANDERSON (Ingénieur de vol ISS) Lieu et date de naissance : 23/02/1959 ; Omaha (Nebraska) Statut familial : Marié et 2 enfants Etudes : Promu bachelier en physique à Hastings College, maîtrise en ingénierie aérospatiale à la Iowa State University Statut professionnel: Directeur du centre des opérations de secours à la Nasa Nasa : Sélectionné le 04/06/1998 (Groupe) Précédents vols : - Equipage Expedition 16 / Soyuz TM-11 Peggy A.
    [Show full text]
  • 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]
  • 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]
  • Expedition 16 Adding International Science
    EXPEDITION 16 ADDING INTERNATIONAL SCIENCE The most complex phase of assembly since the NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson, the fi rst woman Two days after launch, International Space Station was fi rst occupied seven commander of the ISS, and Russian Cosmonaut the Soyuz docked The International Space Station is seen by the crew of STS-118 years ago began when the Expedition 16 crew arrived Yuri Malenchenko were launched aboard the Soyuz to the Space Station as Space Shuttle Endeavour moves away. at the orbiting outpost. During this ambitious six-month TMA-11 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome joining Expedition 15 endeavor, an unprecedented three Space Shuttle in Kazakhstan on October 10. The two veterans of Commander Fyodor crews will visit the Station delivering critical new earlier missions aboard the ISS were accompanied by Yurchikhin, Oleg Kotov, components – the American-built “Harmony” node, the Dr. Sheikh Muzaphar Shukor, an orthopedic surgeon both of Russia, and European Space Agency’s “Columbus” laboratory and and the fi rst Malaysian to fl y in space. NASA Flight Engineer Japanese “Kibo” element. Clayton Anderson. Shukor spent nine days CREW PROFILE on the ISS, returning to Earth in the Soyuz Peggy Whitson (Ph. D.) TMA-10 on October Expedition 16 Commander 21 with Yurchikhin and Born: February 9, 1960, Mount Ayr, Iowa Kotov who had been Education: Graduated with a bachelors degree in biology/chemistry from Iowa aboard the station since Wesleyan College, 1981 & a doctorate in biochemistry from Rice University, 1985 April 9. Experience: Selected as an astronaut in 1996, Whitson served as a Science Offi cer during Expedition 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Sts-110 F R a M E W O R K F O R E X P a N D I N G S T a T I O N R E S E a R C H
    STS-110 F R A M E W O R K F O R E X P A N D I N G S T A T I O N R E S E A R C H WWW.SHUTTLEPRESSKIT.COM Updated March 20, 2001 STS-110 Table of Contents Mission Overview ..................................................................................................... 1 Mission Objectives .................................................................................................. 7 New, Safer Engines to Propel Atlantis ................................................................... 9 Crewmembers ......................................................................................................... 11 Flight Day Summary Timeline ............................................................................... 15 Rendezvous and Docking ..................................................................................... 16 Spacewalk STS-110 Extravehicular Activity ............................................................................... 20 Payloads Payload Overview .................................................................................................... 28 Central Integrated Truss Structure ........................................................................... 30 Mobile Transporter ................................................................................................... 35 Experiments: DTOs and DSOs Science Payloads .................................................................................................... 39 Biomass Production System ...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • International Space Station Skyrockets Into 21St
    ALUMINUM EXTRUSION SHOWCASE AEROSPACE— International Space Station Skyrockets into 21st Century A Safe Hand-Hold in Space INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION SKYROCKETS INTO 21ST CENTURY: EXTRUDED ALUMINUM TRUSS STRUCTURES LINK STATION MODULES TOGETHER IN THE MOST COMPLEX SCIENTIFIC VENTURE IN HISTORY page 1 Innovation launches into orbit, thanks to aluminum industry manufacturers who are supplying extruded aluminum tubing for the truss structures that link together the International Space Station (ISS). Boeing Company engineers are working with extruders on a massive scale during construction and assembly of the newest extruded truss sections: Starboard segments S3, S4, S6, and Portside segments P3, P4 and P5, scheduled to begin launching in Spring, 2005. Truss section P6, launched in November 2000, supports the current ISS configuration. A marvel of science and aerospace engineering, this vast ISS program is truly flourishing thanks to aluminum extruders across the globe. The ISS is the most complex international scientific venture in history. Its crews are conducting With Earth on the horizon, the International Space Station, as seen research to support space exploration, and are from aboard the Space Shuttle providing a stable environment for scientific, tech- Discovery. nological and commercial research. Building the ISS involves more than 100,000 space agency and contractor personnel from 16 countries, including more than 10,000 first to fourth-tier suppliers—truly an example of international cooperation. The Port Side P6 truss segment hangs suspended from a crane, moving through the Space Station Processing Facility, on its way to launch on the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The P6 MORE comprises Solar Array Wing-3 and the Integrated Electronic Assembly, installed on the ISS in November 2000.
    [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]
  • STS-117 Press Kit STS-117 Press Kit
    STS-117 Press Kit STS-117 Press Kit CONTENTS Section Page STS-117 MISSION OVERVIEW................................................................................................. 1 STS-117 TIMELINE OVERVIEW................................................................................................ 11 MISSION PRIORITIES............................................................................................................. 13 LAUNCH AND LANDING ........................................................................................................... 15 LAUNCH............................................................................................................................................... 15 ABORT-TO-ORBIT (ATO)...................................................................................................................... 15 TRANSATLANTIC ABORT LANDING (TAL)............................................................................................. 15 RETURN-TO-LAUNCH-SITE (RTLS)....................................................................................................... 15 ABORT ONCE AROUND (AOA)............................................................................................................... 15 LANDING ............................................................................................................................................. 15 MISSION PROFILE................................................................................................................... 17 STS-117
    [Show full text]
  • → Space for Europe European Space Agency
    number 164 | 4th quarter 2015 bulletin → space for europe European Space Agency The European Space Agency was formed out of, and took over the rights and The ESA headquarters are in Paris. obligations of, the two earlier European space organisations – the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO) and the European Launcher Development The major establishments of ESA are: Organisation (ELDO). The Member States are Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands. Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Canada is a Cooperating State. ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany. In the words of its Convention: the purpose of the Agency shall be to provide for ESRIN, Frascati, Italy. and to promote, for exclusively peaceful purposes, cooperation among European States in space research and technology and their space applications, with a view ESAC, Madrid, Spain. to their being used for scientific purposes and for operational space applications systems: EAC, Cologne, Germany. → by elaborating and implementing a long-term European space policy, by ECSAT, Harwell, United Kingdom. recommending space objectives to the Member States, and by concerting the policies of the Member States with respect to other national and international ESA Redu, Belgium. organisations and institutions; → by elaborating and implementing activities and programmes in the space field; → by coordinating the European space programme and national programmes, and by integrating the latter progressively and as completely as possible into the European space programme, in particular as regards the development of applications Co-Chairs of the Council: satellites; Bo Andersen and Jean-Yves Le Gall → by elaborating and implementing the industrial policy appropriate to its programme and by recommending a coherent industrial policy to the Member States.
    [Show full text]
  • Britain Back in Space
    Spaceflight A British Interplanetary Society Publication Britain back in Space Vol 58 No 1 January 2016 £4.50 www.bis-space.com 1.indd 1 11/26/2015 8:30:59 AM 2.indd 2 11/26/2015 8:31:14 AM CONTENTS Editor: Published by the British Interplanetary Society David Baker, PhD, BSc, FBIS, FRHS Sub-editor: Volume 58 No. 1 January 2016 Ann Page 4-5 Peake on countdown – to the ISS and beyond Production Assistant: As British astronaut Tim Peake gets ready for his ride into space, Ben Jones Spaceflight reviews the build-up to this mission and examines the Spaceflight Promotion: possibilities that may unfold as a result of European contributions to Suszann Parry NASA’s Orion programme. Spaceflight Arthur C. Clarke House, 6-9 Ready to go! 27/29 South Lambeth Road, London, SW8 1SZ, England. What happens when Tim Peake arrives at the International Space Tel: +44 (0)20 7735 3160 Station, where can I watch it, listen to it, follow it, and what are the Fax: +44 (0)20 7582 7167 broadcasters doing about special programming? We provide the Email: [email protected] directory to a media frenzy! www.bis-space.com 16-17 BIS Technical Projects ADVERTISING Tel: +44 (0)1424 883401 Robin Brand has been busy gathering the latest information about Email: [email protected] studies, research projects and practical experiments now underway at DISTRIBUTION the BIS, the first in a periodic series of roundups. Spaceflight may be received worldwide by mail through membership of the British 18 Icarus Progress Report Interplanetary Society.
    [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]
  • Peggy Whitson
    PEGGY WHITSON THE LONGEST WOMAN TO STAY IN SPACE INSPIRING facts She holds so many records, for being the oldest woman aged 57: more days in space then any American astronaut of either gender ; more days in space then any other female in the world. The first woman to command the International space station; and most space walks of any female astronaut . She was a biochemist So she sent back as much data as she could She always requested more missions one of the reasons Whiston racked up so many space time. Is because as soon as she landed down from one mission, she requests another one. She was an accomplished space chef with her culinary experiments using freeze dried tortillas. The only 2 things she missed was non freeze dried pizzas and her husband who works on the ground at the Jonson space centre. Peggy Annette Whitson spent 665 days 22 SPACE hours 22 minutes and 36 seconds her selection was in 1996:NASA group . In total TIME EVAs 10 total EVA time 60 hours 21 minutes. Missions STS-111/STS-113 {EXPIDTION 5} This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-SA PEGGY WHITSON BORN : Peggy Annette Whitson {9th February 1960} she is an American biochemistry researcher, retired NASA astronaut, and former chief astronaut. Her first space mission was in 2002, with an extended stay aboard the International space station as a member of expedition 5.Her second mission launched October 10,2007, as the first female commander of the ISS with expedition 16. she was on her third long-duration in space flight and was the commander of the International space station for expedition 51,before handing over to Foydor Yurchikhin on June 1st , 2017.In June 2017 , Whitson broke the record for the longest single space flight by a woman which had previously been held by Samantha Cristoforetti at 199 days, 16 hours.
    [Show full text]