Expedition 57

Expedition 57
ISS Expedition 57 Patch.svg
Uppdragsstatistik
Rymdstation:ISS
Start:4 oktober 2018[1]
Slut:20 december 2018
Tid:76 dag, 17 tim, 43 min
Antal besättningsmedlemmar:6 st
Rymdpromenad
Antal rymdpromenader:1 st
Total tid:7 tim, 45 min
Transport
Uppskjutning:med Sojuz MS-09
Uppskjutningsplats:Kosmodromen i Bajkonur
Landning:med Sojuz MS-09
Landningsplats:Kazakstan
Kronologi
Föregående expedition
Expedition 56
Nästa expedition
Expedition 58
Expedition 57 besättning.

Expedition 57 är den 57:e expeditionen till Internationella rymdstationen (ISS). Expeditionen började den 4 oktober 2018 då delar av Expedition 56s besättning återvände till jorden med Sojuz MS-08.

Oleg Kononenko, Anne McClain och David Saint-Jacques anlände till stationen med Sojuz MS-11 den 3 december.

Expeditionen avslutades den 20 december 2018, då Alexander Gerst, Serena Auñón-Chancellor och Sergey Prokopyev återvände till jorden med Sojuz MS-09.

Aleksej Ovtjinin och Nick Hague

Den 11 oktober 2018 skulle besättningen utökats med Aleksej Ovtjinin och Nick Hague. Men då den raket som sköt upp dem och deras Sojuz MS-10, fick problem, avbröts uppskjutningen automatiskt.

Följder för Expedition 57

För att inte lämna rymdstationen obemannad under några veckor mellan Expedition 57 och Expedition 58 förlängdes Expedition 57 till slutet av december.

Besättning

PositionFörsta delen
(4 oktober - 3 december 2018)
Andra delen
(3 december - 20 december 2018)
BefälhavareTyskland Alexander Gerst, ESA
Hans andra rymdfärd
Flygingenjör 1USA Serena Auñón-Chancellor, NASA
Hennes första rymdfärd
Flygingenjör 2Ryssland Sergey Prokopyev, RSA
Hans första rymdfärd
Flygingenjör 3Ryssland Oleg Kononenko, RSA
Hans fjärde rymdfärd
Flygingenjör 4USA Anne McClain, NASA
Hennes första rymdfärd
Flygingenjör 5Kanada David Saint-Jacques, CSA
Hans första rymdfärd

Referenser

  1. ^ NASA's Space Station Expedition 57 Arkiverad 22 november 2018 hämtat från the Wayback Machine., läst 6 oktober 2018.

Externa länkar

Media som används på denna webbplats

Expedition 57 crew portrait.jpg
The official portrait of the five-member Expedition 57 crew. In the front row from left are Serena Auñón-Chancellor of NASA, Commander Alexander Gerst from the European Space Agency and Sergei Prokopev of Roscosmos. In the back row from left are Flight Engineers Aleksey Ovchinin of Roscosmos and Nick Hague from NASA.
ISS Expedition 56 Patch.svg
The Expedition 56 crew insignia
  • The Expedition 56 astronaut crew will continue the international collaborative work that has been evolving on the International Space Station during the past 17 years. The expedition comes at a time when private corporations and the governments around the world are rapidly developing crew capabilities for human space exploration. Together, with the experience and continued research on the orbiting laboratory, humans will soon establish a new presence in space beyond low-Earth orbit that will enable us to travel farther into space than ever before.
  • The Expedition 56 patch portrays a dove carrying an olive branch on its beak. The patch includes images of the Soyuz launch vehicle for the crew and the space station. The Expedition 56 astronauts’ names are displayed on the dove’s wings and along the limb of Earth at the base of the patch.
  • The dove's tail is firmly planted on Earth to represent the strong link between our home planet and the humans who are sent into the cosmos. The patch illustrates our hope for peace and love in the world, and the innate human desire to spread our wings and explore into the future, building on the wisdom of the past, for the betterment of humanity. The patch was designed by astronaut Drew Feustel's son.
ISS Expedition 58 Patch.svg
The official insignia for the three-member Expedition 58 crew with Anne McClain of NASA, Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency.
  • Thousands of people worldwide dedicate their lives to the human exploration of space. As one team, we strive to learn, discover and pioneer for the benefit of all mankind. The Expedition 58 patch is a crew tribute to those thousands who stand ready every day committed to supporting this mission.
  • Central to the patch is the compass rose—a symbol of exploration past, present and future. The passing of the International Space Station from darkness into light suggests that we are only just peaking over the horizon, looking forward to advancing human understanding of our place in the universe.
  • The crew of Expedition 58 are fortunate explorers … never alone in their journey. Among the night lights on the Earth are glints of brightness – the global team and major control facilities that keep the space station on orbit and its inhabitants on track.
  • And as the explorers from centuries past used stars to guide their way, so too does the crew of Expedition 58. The stars on the Expedition 58 patch are their families, one star for each member. They shine on as a beacon of strength and a guiding light home.
ISS Expedition 57 Patch.svg
The official insignia of the three-member Expedition 57 crew
  • Humans are explorers. We live on a cosmic island. Setting sails towards new worlds has always been our nature, and it is key to our survival. As soon as our ancestors learned how to build ships, they not only used them to sail up and down the coasts, but ultimately they set out to travel beyond the horizon, to discover new continents. The time of space exploration has just begun, a mere blink of an eye in the eon-long history of human exploration. And yet we already have successfully built great ships to sail the black heavenly seas, and we have dared adventurous journeys into the unknown.
  • The Expedition 57 patch is a tribute to human exploration. It depicts an explorer's ship leaving for the unknown as our early ancestors did, and is shaped like an arrow, heading out to new cosmic horizons. It highlights the purpose of the International Space Station as a world class science laboratory for the benefit of mankind and international cooperation, as well as humanity's flagship in space, preparing us for the amazing voyages ahead.
  • The Expedition 57 patch is dedicated to all those thousands of humans who make this journey possible through the contribution of their passion, hard work, and courage to one of the most fascinating projects in human history.