Astronomy:Expedition 23

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ISS Expedition 23
Expedition 23 Reservoir Dogs crew poster.jpg
Promotional Poster
Mission typeISS Expedition
Mission duration76 days, 16 hours, 1 minute
Expedition
Space StationInternational Space Station
Began18 March 2010, 08:03 (2010-03-18UTC08:03Z) UTC
Ended2 June 2010, 00:04 (2010-06-02UTC00:05Z) UTC
Arrived aboardSoyuz TMA-17
Soyuz TMA-18
Departed aboardSoyuz TMA-17
Soyuz TMA-18
Crew
Crew size6
MembersExpedition 22/23:
Oleg Kotov
Soichi Noguchi
Timothy Creamer

Expedition 23/24:
Aleksandr Skvortsov
Mikhail Korniyenko
Tracy Caldwell Dyson
ISS Expedition 23 Patch.svg
Expedition 23 mission patch
Expedition 23 crew members.jpg
(l-r) Korniyenko, Caldwell Dyson, Skvortsov, Kotov, Creamer and Noguchi 

Expedition 23 (Russian: МКС-23) was the 23rd long-duration mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Expedition 23 began with the Soyuz TMA-16 undocking on 18 March 2010. Shortly thereafter cosmonauts Aleksandr Skvortsov and Mikhail Korniyenko and astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson arrived at the Space Station on Soyuz TMA-18 on 4 April 2010.[1] The Soyuz spacecraft lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome at 00:04 EST on 2 April 2010.[2]

Crew

Position First part
(March 2010 to April 2010)
Second part
(April 2010 to June 2010)
Commander Russia Oleg Kotov, RSA
Second spaceflight
Flight Engineer 1 Japan Soichi Noguchi, JAXA
Second spaceflight
Flight Engineer 2 United States Timothy Creamer, NASA
Only spaceflight
Flight Engineer 3 Russia Aleksandr Skvortsov, RSA
First spaceflight
Flight Engineer 4 Russia Mikhail Korniyenko, RSA
First spaceflight
Flight Engineer 5 United States Tracy Caldwell Dyson, NASA
Second spaceflight
Source
NASA[3]

Backup crew

  • Douglas H. Wheelock - Commander
  • Anton Shkaplerov
  • Satoshi Furukawa
  • Mikhail Tyurin
  • Aleksandr Samokutyayev
  • Scott J. Kelly

Mission overview

Three Russian cosmonauts, two American and one Japanese astronauts made up the Expedition 23 crew. It was the first ISS crew to include three Russians at once.[4] The Expedition 23 crew continued outfitting the newest modules of the nearly completed space station. The crew welcomed the shuttle flight STS-131 in April 2010. The Expedition 23 crew also saw the arrival of the Rasvet Russian docking module (MRM1) aboard Space Shuttle Atlantis on STS-132, which launched on 14 May 2010.

The three astronauts of STS-131 and Tracy Caldwell (bottom left) of ISS Expedition 23, the first time four women being at the same time in space.[5]

Gallery

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

External links