New
Station Docks With Space Station
(NASA) The
Soyuz spacecraft with the 11th International Space Station crew,
Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev and Astronaut John Phillips, docked
with the orbiting laboratory at 10:20 p.m. EDT Saturday.
Krikalev was
ready to take over manual control of the spacecraft as it approached
the Station, but his intervention was not necessary. The automated
docking system functioned flawlessly.
With this Station
crew is European Space Agency Astronaut Roberto Vittori of Italy.
Expedition 11’s Krikalev and Phillips will spend about six months
aboard the Space Station. Vittori will spend almost eight days
on the Station conducting scientific experiments, and return
to Earth with the Expedition 10 crew.
That crew,
Commander Leroy Chiao and Cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov, has been
on the Station since October. They will leave the Station April
24 in the Soyuz that brought them to the orbiting laboratory.
Their landing is scheduled for 6:08 p.m. EDT that day in Kazakhstan.
Expedition
11 and Vittori launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan
at 8:46 p.m. EDT Thursday.
Expedition
11 Will Welcome Discovery to Station
Highlights
of the new Expedition 11 International Space Station crew’s mission
include welcoming the crew of the Space Shuttle Discovery on
its STS-114 mission, the first Shuttle flight since the Columbia
accident. Discovery crewmembers will conduct three spacewalks
at the Station, deliver several tons of equipment and supplies
and return to Earth with equipment and scientific experiments
and trash from the Station.
Sergei Krikalev,
46, and John Phillips, 54, will receive extensive handover briefings
from their Expedition 10 predecessors, and will get training
on the Station’s robotic Canadarm2.
They also may
see the addition of a third crewmember to the Station this summer
brought to the Station by Atlantis on the STS-121 mission. Plans
call for them to do two spacewalks, the first in August from
the U.S. Airlock Quest in U.S. spacesuits, and the second, in
September, in Russian spacesuits from the Pirs Airlock. The spacewalkers
will continue outfitting the Station’s exterior and work with
scientific experiments.
Expedition
11 Commander Krikalev and NASA ISS Science Officer Phillips also
will welcome the arrival of two Progress unpiloted supply vehicles.
ISS Progress 18 is scheduled to reach the Station in June and
ISS Progress 19 should be launched near the end of August.
In August,
Krikalev and Phillips will move their Soyuz spacecraft from the
Pirs docking compartment to the Zarya docking port. That will
permit use of the Pirs Airlock for spacewalks.
Krikalev is
a veteran of five previous spaceflights, including two missions
to the Russian space station Mir and two Shuttle flights. He
was a member of the first Station crew, serving aboard a much
smaller ISS from Nov. 2, 2000, to March 18, 2001. He has spent
a year, 5 months and 10 days in space. This flight should see
him become the world’s most experienced space traveler.
Born in Leningrad
(now St. Petersburg), Russia, he graduated from what is now St.
Petersburg Technical University in 1981 and then joined NPO Energia,
the Russian organization responsible for human spaceflight. He
was selected as a cosmonaut in 1985.
Record or not,
just being in space isn’t what’s important, Krikalev says. "The
job itself is very interesting for me, being there and being
able to look back on Earth, to do something challenging." He
said he probably hasn’t paid enough attention to that record.
Phillips was
born in Fort Belvoir, Virginia., and considers Scottsdale, Arizona.,
his home. He graduated from the Naval Academy in 1972 and became
a Naval aviator. After leaving the Navy in 1982, he earned a
masters and doctorate in geophysics and space physics from the
University of California in 1984 and 1987. He did postdoctoral
work at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in New Mexico.
He was selected
as an astronaut in 1996. He was a member of the STS-100 crew
of Endeavour in 2001. On that mission he coordinated two spacewalks
at the Station to install Canadarm2.
Phillips has
wanted to return to the Station ever since. "It was a wonderful
place to be," he said. "The crew was doing a great
job; they were having a good time." He wanted to stay longer
then. Now he’ll have about six months there.
Krikalev and
Phillips are the Station’s fifth two-person crew. After the Columbia
accident on Feb. 1, 2003, the ISS Program and the international
partners determined that because of limitations on supplies the
Station would be occupied by two crewmembers instead of three
until Shuttle flights resume.
The 11th crew
will continue science activities, initially with facilities and
samples already on the Station, but later with experiments scheduled
to arrive at the Station aboard Discovery.
The science
team at the Payload Operations Center at the Marshall Space Flight
Center in Huntsville, Ala., will continue to operate some experiments
without crew input and other experiments are designed to function
autonomously.
Krikalev and
Phillips are scheduled to spend about 180 days on the Station,
returning to Earth in October, a little over a week after the
arrival of their Expedition 12 successors.