Sergej Krikaljov
Sergej Krikaljov (Серге́й Константи́нович Крикалёв) | |
Sergej Krikaljov på ISS | |
Ryska rymdflygstyrelsen, kosmonaut | |
---|---|
Född | 27 augusti 1958 Leningrad, Sovjetunionen |
Andra yrken | Maskintekniker |
Tid i rymden | 803 dgr 9 tim 39 min |
Urvalsgrupp | 1985 års kosmonautgrupp |
Antal rymdpromenader | 8 |
Rymdpromenadtid | 41 tim 8 min |
Uppdrag | Sojuz TM-7 Sojuz TM-12 STS-60 STS-88 ISS-1 ISS-11 |
Uppdragsemblem | |
Utmärkelser |
Sergej Konstantinovitj Krikaljov (ryska: Серге́й Константи́нович Крикалёв), född 27 augusti 1958 i Leningrad i Sovjetunionen, är en rysk kosmonaut.
Familj
Krikaljov är gift med Jelena Jurijevna Terjochina, född 1956 och tillsamman har de dottern Olga Sergejevna Krikaljova född 20 februari 1990. Hans föräldrar är fadern Konstantin Sergejevitj Krikaljov född 1932 och modern Nadezjda Ivanova Krikaljova (född: Prokofjeva) född 1931. Föräldrarna är pensionerade.
Kosmonauten
Krikaljov är en sovjetisk/rysk kosmonaut som blev uttagen till det sovjetiska rymdprogrammet 1985.
Krikaljov har varit med om en mycket omtumlande händelse under en av sina rymdfärder. Det var under den andra färden då han befann sig ombord på rymdstationen Mir. Under tiden han var uppe i rymden skedde upplösningen av hans gamla land Sovjetunionen. När hans rymdresa påbörjades var han medborgare i Sovjetunionen, och när han landade var han medborgare i Ryssland. Han har fått titeln Sovjetunionens sista medborgare.
Utmärkelser
Asteroiden 7469 Krikalev är uppkallad efter honom.[1]
Rymdfärdsstatistik
Färd | Datum | Tid | EVA |
---|---|---|---|
Sojuz TM-7 | 26 november 1988 - 27 april 1989 | 3635:10:00 | 0:00:00 |
Sojuz TM-12 | 18 maj 1991 - 25 mars 1992 | 7484:01:00 | 36:10:00 |
STS-60 | 3 - 11 februari 1994 | 199:09:00 | 0:00:00 |
STS-88 | 4 - 15 december 1998 | 283:18:00 | 0:00:00 |
ISS-1 | 31 oktober 2000 - 21 mars 2001 | 3383:38:00 | 0:00:00 |
ISS-11 | 15 april - 11 oktober 2005 | 4296:23:00 | 4:58:00 |
Totalt | 19281:39:00 | 41:08:00 |
Externa länkar
- Wikimedia Commons har media som rör Sergej Krikaljov.
Referenser
- ^ ”Minor Planet Center 7469 Krikalev” (på engelska). Minor Planet Center. https://www.minorplanetcenter.net/db_search/show_object?object_id=7469. Läst 9 augusti 2020.
Media som används på denna webbplats
The official crew patch for the Soviet Soyuz TM-7 mission, which delivered the EO-4 and Aragatz crews to the space station Mir.
STS-60 crew patch
- The design of the crew patch for NASA's STS-60 mission depicts the Space Shuttle Discovery's on-orbit configuration. The American and Russian flags symbolize the partnership of the two countries and their crew members taking flight into space together for the first time. The open payload bay contains: the Space Habitation Module (Spacehab), a commercial space laboratory for life and material science experiments; and a Getaway Special Bridge Assembly in the aft section carrying various experiments, both deployable and attached. A scientific experiment to create and measure an ultra-vacuum environment and perform semiconductor material science – the Wake Shield Facility – is shown on the Remote Manipulator System (RMS) prior to deployment.
Designed by the crew members, this patch commemorates the first assembly flight to carry United States-built hardware for constructing the International Space Station (ISS). This flight's primary task is to assemble the cornerstone of the Space Station: the Node with the Functional Cargo Block (fgb).
The rising sun symbolizes the dawning of a new era of international cooperation in space and the beginning of a new program: the International Space Station. The Earth scene outlines the countries of the Station Partners: the United States, Russia, those of the European Space Agency (ESA), Japan, and Canada. Along with the Pressurized Mating Adapters (PMA) and the Functional Cargo Block, the Node is shown in the final mated configuration while berthed to the Space Shuttle during the STS-88/2A mission.
Cosmonaut Sergei K. Krikalev, Expedition 11 commander representing Russia's Federal Space Agency, works with the Treadmill Vibration Isolation System (TVIS) Chassis Assembly during an In-Flight Maintenance (IFM) in the Zvezda Service Module of the International Space Station (ISS).
The first International Space Station crew patch is a simplified graphic of the station complex when fully completed. The station is seen with solar arrays turned forward. The last names of the Expedition One crew, Soyuz pilot Yuri Gidzenko, flight engineer Sergei Krikalev, and expedition commander William (Bill) Shepherd, appear under the station symbol.
Hero of the Russian Federation gold medal.
The official crew patch for the Soviet Soyuz TM-12 mission, which delivered the EO-9 and Project Juno crews to the space station Mir.
The patch was redrawn by Jorge Cartes (JCR) from Spacepatches.nl
ISS Expedition 11 insignia.
The emblem of the eleventh expedition to the International Space Station (ISS) emphasizes the roles of the United States and the Russian Federation in the multinational ISS partnership. The two rocket plumes, in the style of the flags of these two nations, represent the Russian Soyuz vehicles and the American Space Shuttles. The ISS image shows the configuration of the orbiting Station at the start of the expedition, with docked Soyuz and Progress vehicles and the huge American solar panels. The names of the two crew members are shown on the margin of the patch. ISS Commander Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips, NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer, are expected to launch on a Soyuz vehicle and to be in orbit during the return to flight of the Space Shuttle. The crew explains, “The beauty of our home planet and the vivid contrasts of the space environment are shown by the blue and green Earth with the Space Station orbiting overhead, and by the bright stars, dark sky, and dazzling sun.”