Expedition 26
Expedition 26 | |||
Uppdragsstatistik | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rymdstation: | ISS | ||
Start: | 26 november 2010, 04:46 UTC[1] | ||
Slut: | 16 mars 2011, 08:54 UTC[1] | ||
Antal besättningsmedlemmar: | 6 st | ||
Rymdpromenad | |||
Antal rymdpromenader: | 2st | ||
Total tid: | 10 timmar, 14 minuter | ||
Transport | |||
Uppskjutning: | med Sojuz TMA-01M, Sojuz TMA-20 | ||
Uppskjutningsplats: | Kosmodromen i Bajkonur | ||
Landning: | med Sojuz TMA-01M, Sojuz TMA-20 | ||
Landningsplats: | Kazakstan | ||
Kronologi | |||
|
Expedition 26 var den 26:e expeditionen till Internationella rymdstationen (ISS). Expeditionen började den 26 november 2010 då delar av Expedition 25s besättning återvände till jorden med Sojuz TMA-19.
Dmitri Kondratyev, Catherine G. Coleman och Paolo A. Nespoli anlände till stationen med Sojuz TMA-20 den 17 december 2010.
Expeditionen avslutades den 16 mars 2011 då Scott J. Kelly, Aleksandr Kaleri och Oleg Skripotjka återvände till jorden med Sojuz TMA-01M.
Besättning
Position | Första delen (26 november - 17 december 2010) | Andra delen (17 december 2010 - 16 mars 2011) |
---|---|---|
Befälhavare | Scott J. Kelly, NASA Hans tredje rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 1 | Aleksandr Kaleri, RSA Hans femte rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 2 | Oleg Skripotjka, RSA Hans första rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 3 | Dmitrij Kondratjev, RSA Hans första rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 4 | Catherine G. Coleman, NASA Hennes tredje rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 5 | Paolo A. Nespoli, RSA Hans andra rymdfärd |
Referenser
- ^ [a b] NASA's Space Station Expedition 26 Arkiverad 19 maj 2017 hämtat från the Wayback Machine., läst 28 augusti 2016.
Externa länkar
|
Media som används på denna webbplats
In the foreground of the patch, the International Space Station is prominently displayed to acknowledge the efforts of the entire International Space Station (ISS) team - both the crews who have built and operated it, and the team of scientists, engineers, and support personnel on Earth who have provided a foundation for each successful mission. Their efforts and accomplishments have demonstrated the space station's capabilities as a technology test bed and a science laboratory, as well as a path to the human exploration of our solar system and beyond. The ISS is shown with the European Space Agency's (ESA) Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV-2), the Johannes Kepler, docked to resupply it with experiments, food, water, and fuel for Expedition 26 and beyond. This Expedition 26 patch represents the teamwork among the international partners - USA, Russia, Japan, Canada, and the ESA - and the ongoing commitment from each partner to build, improve, and utilize the ISS. Prominently displayed in the background is our home planet, Earth - the focus of much of our exploration and research on our outpost in space. The two stars symbolize two Soyuz spacecraft, each one carrying a three-member crew, who for four months will work and live together aboard the ISS as Expedition 26. The patch shows the crewmembers' names, and it's framed with the flags of their countries of origin - United States, Russia, and Italy.
The mission patch design for the 25th Expedition to the International Space Station (ISS) pays tribute to the rich history of innovation and bold engineering in the quest for knowledge, exploration and discovery in space. The patch highlights the symbolic passing of the torch to the ISS, as the vehicle that will carry us into the future of space exploration. The Space Shuttle Program emblem is the foundation of the patch and forms the Greek letter 'Alpha' with a new dawn breaking at the center, symbolizing a new vision for space exploration. The Alpha symbol is overlaid by the Greek letter 'Omega', paying tribute to the culmination of the Space Shuttle Program. The mission designation '25' is shown centered at the bottom of the patch, symbolizing the point in time when the Space Shuttle, the workhorse of the ISS assembly process, will make its final visit to the ISS. Between the '25' and the Earth crescent, the orbiter is shown returning to Earth on its final journey, during the Expedition 25 mission. Above Earth and the breaking dawn, the ISS takes center-stage, completed and fully equipped to carry us beyond this new dawn to new voyages and discoveries. The orbit connecting the ISS and the Earth is drawn in the colors of the United States and Russian flags; paying tribute to the blended heritage of the crew. The two largest stars in the field represent the arrival and departure of the crews in separate Russian Soyuz vehicles. The six stars in the field represent the six crew members. The International Space Station abbreviation 'ISS' and 'MKC' - in English and Russian, respectively - flank the mission number designation, and the names of the crew members in their native languages border the ISS symbol.
Expedition 26 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured clockwise from the right are NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, commander; NASA astronaut Catherine Coleman, Russian cosmonauts Dmitry Kondratyev, Oleg Skripochka, Alexander Kaleri and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Paolo Nespoli, all flight engineers.
The Expedition 27 patch depicts the International Space Station (ISS) prominently orbiting Earth, continuing its mission for science, technology and education. The ISS is an ever-present reminder of the cooperation between the United States, Russia, Japan, Canada, and the European Space Agency (ESA) – and of the scientific, technical, and cultural achievements that have resulted from that unique teamwork. The ISS is shown in its completed status with the latest addition of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS), and with two resupply vehicles docked at each end of the station. The Southern Cross Constellation is also show in the foreground and its five stars, along with the sun, symbolize the six international crew members that live and work on the space station. The Southern Cross is one of the smallest modern constellations, and also one of the most distinctive. It has cultural significance all over the world and inspires teams to push the boundaries of their worlds, both in space and on the ground.