Expedition 44
Expedition 44 | |||
Uppdragsstatistik | |||
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Rymdstation: | ISS | ||
Start: | 11 juni 2015[1] | ||
Slut: | 11 september 2015[1] | ||
Antal besättningsmedlemmar: | 6 st | ||
Rymdpromenad | |||
Antal rymdpromenader: | 1 st | ||
Total tid: | 5 timmar, 31 minuter | ||
Transport | |||
Uppskjutning: | med Sojuz TMA-16M, Sojuz TMA-17M | ||
Uppskjutningsplats: | Kosmodromen i Bajkonur | ||
Landning: | med Sojuz TMA-16M, Sojuz TMA-17M, Sojuz TMA-18M | ||
Landningsplats: | Kazakstan | ||
Kronologi | |||
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Expedition 44 var den 44:e expeditionen till Internationella rymdstationen (ISS). Expeditionen började den 11 mars 2015 då delar av Expedition 43s besättning återvände till jorden med Sojuz TMA-15M.
Oleg Kononenko, Kimiya Yui och Kjell N. Lindgren anlände till stationen med Sojuz TMA-17M den 23 juli 2015.
Expeditionen avslutades den 11 september 2015 då Gennadij Padalka, Andreas Mogensen och Ajdyn Ajymbetov återvände till jorden med Sojuz TMA-16M.
Expedition 44 var andra etappen i Michail Kornijenkos och Scott J. Kellys ett år långa vistelse ombord på rymdstationen.
Besättning
Position | Första delen (11 juni - 23 juli 2015) | Andra delen (23 juli - 11 september 2015) |
---|---|---|
Befälhavare | Gennadij Padalka, RSA Hans femte rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 1 | Michail Kornijenko, RSA Hans andra rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 2 | Scott J. Kelly, NASA Hans fjärde rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 3 | Oleg Kononenko, RSA Hans tredje rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 4 | Kimiya Yui, JAXA Hans första rymdfärd | |
Flygingenjör 5 | Kjell N. Lindgren, NASA Hans första rymdfärd |
Referenser
- ^ [a b] NASA's Space Station Expedition 44 Arkiverad 24 oktober 2015 hämtat från the Wayback Machine., läst 3 september 2016.
Externa länkar
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Media som används på denna webbplats
The hexagon (six-sided) shape of the Expedition 43 patch represents the six crew members living and working onboard the orbital outpost. The International Space Station (ISS) is portrayed in orbit around the Earth, representing the multi-national partnership that has constructed, developed, and continues to operate the ISS for the benefit of all humankind. The sunrise marks the beginning of a new day, reflecting the fact that we're at the dawn of our history as a space faring species. The moon and planets represent future exploration of our solar system, for which the ISS is a stepping stone. Finally, the five stars honor the crews who have lost their lives during the pursuit of human spaceflight.
Official Expedition 44 crew portrait
- Soyuz 42 (Gennady Padalka, Mikhail Kornienko, Scott Kelly) and Soyuz 43 (Oleg Kononenko, Kimiya Yui and Kjell Lindgren)
This is the insignia for the Expedition 44 mission.
- The International Space Station is positioned in the foreground poised to study Earth, the sun and cosmos that lie beyond. Two members of the Expedition 44 crew will spend a full year on the ISS - providing valuable experience for future long duration missions into deep space. The 12 Earths represent the planet's position around the sun over the course of that year. Four of the Earths are silhouetted in sunlight representing the four month duration of Expedition 44. The nine stars in the background represent the nine individuals that will visit and work on the ISS during the course of the expedition, including the six-member crew, whose names are inscribed around the patch's border, and the three-person Soyuz "taxi" crew. The use of ellipses and circles throughout the patch reflect a theme of "completion" or "return," as investments made in this orbiting laboratory return benefit to the Earth and its inhabitants.
The Expedition 45 crew will conduct its journey of exploration and discovery from a summit whose foundation was built by past generations of pioneers, scientists, engineers and explorers. This foundation is represented by the book of knowledge at the bottom of the patch. Curves radiate from the book representing the flow of knowledge - and the hard work, sacrifice and innovation that makes human spaceflight possible. The pages written during Expedition 45 will serve to benefit humanity on Earth and in space. The International Space Station is represented by a single bright star soaring over the Earth, illuminating a path to future, more distant destinations.