Expeditions to the international space station

Hawkins, Vance (2012) Expeditions to the international space station. University Publications, Delhi, India. ISBN 9788132335597

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Abstract

Expedition 1, or Expedition One, was the first long-duration stay on the International Space Station (ISS). The three - person crew stayed aboard the station for 136 days, from November 2000 to March 2001. It was the beginning of an uninterrupted human presence on the station which still continues, as of February 2011. Expedition 2, which also had three crew members , immediately followed Expedition 1 . The official start of the expedition occurred when the crew docked to the station on 2 November 2000, aboard the non-re-usable Russian spacecraft Soyuz TM-31, which had launched two days earlier. During their mission, the Expedition 1 crew activated various systems on board the station, unpacked equipment that had been delivered, and hosted three visiting Space Shuttle crews and two unmanned Russian Progress resupply vehicles. The crew was very busy throughout the mission, which was declared a success. The three visiting Space Shuttles brought equipment, supplies, and key components of the space station. The first of these, STS-97, docked in early December 2000, and brought the first pair of large U.S. photovoltaic arrays, which increased the station's power capabilities fivefold. The second visiting shuttle mission was STS-98, which was docked in mid-February 2001, delivered the US$1.4 billion research module Destiny, which increased the mass of the station beyond that of Mir for the first time. Mid-March 2001 saw the final shuttle visit of the expedition, STS-102 , whose main purpose was to exchange the Expedition I crew with the next three person long - duration crew, March 2001 Expedition 2. The expedition ended when Discovery undocked from the station on 18 The Expedition 1 crew consisted of an American commander and two Russians. The commander, Bill Shepherd, had been in space three times before, all on shuttle missions which lasted at most a week. The Russians, Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei K. Krikalev, both had previous long-duration spaceflights on Mir, with Krikalev having spent over a full year in space.

Item Type: Book
Subjects: T Technology > TL Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics
Divisions: Electronic Books
Depositing User: Esam @ Hisham Muhammad
Date Deposited: 22 Nov 2022 08:52
Last Modified: 22 Nov 2022 08:52
URI: http://odlsystem2.utm.my/id/eprint/3622

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