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1st October, 2005

International Space Station Status Report

Expedition 12 Crew

Commander William McArthur and Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev, the 12th international space station crew, launched aboard their Soyuz TMA spacecraft at 11:55 p.m. EDT Friday to begin a 182-day stay in space.

Soyuz launch

The Soyuz TMA spacecraft carrying the Expedition 12 crewmembers launches from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.
Credit: NASA TV


Their Soyuz TMA capsule reached orbit a little less than nine minutes after liftoff. Russian flight controllers reported the spacecraft's solar arrays had deployed as scheduled, and that all appeared normal.
The Soyuz TMA is scheduled to dock with the station at 1:32 a.m. EDT on Oct. 3.
With the Expedition 12 crew was American Greg Olsen, the third private citizen in space. He is flying under a contract with the Russian Federal Space Agency. He will spend about eight days on the station.
Olsen will conduct scientific experiments on the station, and then return to Earth with Expedition 11. That crew, Commander Sergei Krikalev and NASA Science Officer John Phillips, has been on the orbiting laboratory since April.

McArthur, Tokarev and Olsen complete the checkout of the Soyuz TMA-7 capsule

Commander William S. McArthur Jr. (right), Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev (center) and U.S. Spaceflight Participant Gregory Olsen complete the checkout of their Soyuz TMA-7 capsule at the Energia Integration Facility at the Baikonur Cosmodrome.
Credit: NASA

They will undock Oct. 10 in the Soyuz TMA that brought them to the station April 16. Landing is scheduled for 9:08 p.m. EDT that day in the steppes of Kazakhstan, winding up their 180-day increment.

McArthur, 54, a retired Army colonel, is a veteran of three shuttle flights, including one to the station and one to the Russian space station Mir. Tokarev, 52, a colonel in the Russian Air Force, is a veteran of one spaceflight, to the international space station aboard a space shuttle.

Just after they board the station, they will receive a safety briefing and then begin extensive handover briefings from their Expedition 11 predecessors. They will get training on the station's Canadarm2 and on systems and experiments on the station.

During their stay on the station McArthur and Tokarev will do two or three spacewalks. The first, from the Quest airlock in U.S. spacesuits, is planned for early November. Tasks include installation of a camera group and retrieval of the station's floating potential probe.

That will be McArthur's third spacewalk and the first for Tokarev.

McArthur, Tokarev and Olsen at the Baikonur Cosmodrome

Commander William McArthur (top), Flight Engineer and Soyuz Commander Valery Tokarev (bottom) and U.S. Spaceflight Participant Gregory Olsen stand on the stairs of their launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome. Credit: NASA

About two weeks later the crewmembers will board their Soyuz spacecraft and move it from the Pirs docking compartment to a docking port on the Zarya module. That will clear the Pirs for use of its airlock in a spacewalk using Russian Orlan suits in December.
That spacewalk will focus on retrieving scientific experiments and photography of a micrometeoroid monitoring system and the Soyuz descent module's multilayer insulation.
A third spacewalk early next year in U.S. spacesuits is under consideration.
McArthur and Tokarev also are scheduled to welcome an unpiloted Progress cargo craft to the station, just in time for Christmas. That Progress will bring fuel, equipment, supplies, water, oxygen and air to the station. Docking is planned for Dec. 23.
Station maintenance will occupy considerable time. They will continue scientific investigations aboard the orbiting laboratory, as well as a program of scientific education activities and Earth observations.
Their replacements, the 13th crew of the station, are scheduled to arrive in March 2006


Information on the crew's activities aboard the Space Station, future launch dates and Station sighting opportunities from anywhere on the Earth is available on the Internet at: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/

real-time Location of the International Space Station


The ISS to Date (28th December, 2004):
Vital Statistics:
ISS: Major Elements:
Zarya: Launched Nov. 20, 1998
Unity: Attached Dec. 8, 1998
Zvezda: Attached July 25, 2000
Z1 Truss: Attached Oct. 14, 2000
Soyuz: Docked Oct. 15, 2004
P6 Integrated Truss: Attached Dec. 3, 2000
Destiny: Attached Feb. 10, 2001
Canadarm2: Attached April 22, 2001
Joint Airlock: Attached July 15, 2001
Pirs: Attached Sept. 16, 2001
S0 Truss: Attached April 11, 2002
S1 Truss: Attached Oct. 10, 2002
P1 Truss: Attached Nov. 26, 2002
Weight: 404,069 pounds (183,283 kg)
Habitable Volume: 15,000 cubic feet (425 cubic meters)
Surface Area (solar arrays): 9,600 square feet (892 square meters)
Dimensions: Width: 240 feet (73 meters) across solar arrays
Length: 146 feet (44.5 meters) from Destiny Lab to Zvezda; 171 feet (52 meters) with a Progress resupply vessel docked
Height: 90 feet (27.5 meters)
Station Science:
Expedition 1: 4 science experiments
Expedition 2: 18 science experiments
Expedition 3: 19 science experiments
Expedition 4: 27 science experiments
Expedition 5: 25 science experiments
Expedition 6: 18 science experiments
Expedition 7: 18 science experiments
Expedition 8: 19 science experiments
Expedition 9: 20 science experiments
Expedition 10: 20 science experiments
Expedition 11: 19 science experiments
 Expedition Crews
ISS Flights:
American: 17 Space Shuttle flights
Russian: 2 Proton flights
10 Soyuz crew flights
1 Soyuz assembly flight
18 Progress resupply flights
Spacewalks:
Shuttle-based: 28 spacewalks
ISS-based: 34 spacewalks
Total time: 373 hours, 18 minutes
Crew Support:
Weight: 6,000 pounds (2,722 kg) of supplies per Expedition
In flight: 2 crewmembers
Ground: more than 100,000 personnel
Contractors: 500 facilities
States: 37
Countries 16
Meal Consumption:
Meals: more than 13,000
Snacks: more than 10,000
Weight: more than 20,000 pounds (9,072 kilograms)

Expedition Crews:
*Launch to Landing

Expedition 1 Launch: 31st October, 2000
Land: 21st March, 2001
Time*: 140 days, 23 hours, 28 minutes
Crew:
Commander William Shepherd
Soyuz Commander Yuri Gidzenko
Flight Engineer Sergei Krikalev
Expedition 2 Launch: 8th March, 2001
Land: 22nd August, 2001
Time*: 167 days, 6 hours, 41 minutes
Crew:
Commander Yury Usachev
Flight Engineer Susan Helms
Flight Engineer James Voss
Expedition 3 Launch: 10th August, 2001
Land: 17th December, 2001
Time*: 128 days, 20 hours, 45 minutes
Crew:
Commander Frank Culbertson
Soyuz Commander Vladimir Dezhurov
Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin
Expedition 4 Launch: 5th December, 2001
Land: 19th June, 2002
Time*: 195 days, 19 hours, 39 minutes
Crew:
Commander Yury Onufrienko
Flight Engineer Dan Bursch
Flight Engineer Carl Walz
Expedition 5 Launch: 5th June, 2002
Land: 7th December, 2002
Time*: 184 days, 22 hours, 14 minutes
Crew:
Commander Valery Korzun
NASA ISS Science Officer Peggy Whitson
Flight Engineer Sergei Treschev
Expedition 6 Launch: 23rd November, 2002
Land: 3rd May, 2003
Time*: 161 days, 1 hour, 17 minutes
Crew:
Commander Ken Bowersox
Flight Engineer Nikolai Budarin
NASA ISS Science Officer Don Pettit
Expedition 7 Launch: 25th April, 2003
Land: 27th October, 2003
Time*: 184 days, 21 hours, 47 minutes
Crew:
Commander Yuri Malenchenko
NASA ISS Science Officer Ed Lu
Expedition 8 Launch: 18th October, 2003
Land: 29th April, 2004
Time*: 194 days, 18 hours, 35 minutes
Crew:
Commander/NASA ISS Science Officer Michael Foale
Flight Engineer Alexander Kaleri
Expedition 9 Launch: 18th April, 2004
Land: 19th October, 2004
Time*: 187 days, 21 hours and 17 minutes
Crew:
Commander Gennady Padalka
Flight Engineer/NASA ISS Science Officer Mike Fincke
Expedition 10: Launch: 13th October, 2004
Land: 24th April, 2005 (scheduled)
Time*: TBD
Crew:
Commander/NASA ISS Science Officer Leroy Chiao
Soyuz Commander/Flight Engineer Salizhan Sharipov
Expedition 11: Launch: 14th April, 2005
Land: 7th October, 2005
Time*: TBD
Crew: Commander Sergei Krikalev
Flight Engineer/NASA ISS Science Officer John Phillips

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