Й |
Spacecraft |
Launch date |
Landing date |
Station element |
13 |
Progress Ь-44 |
Feb 26, 2001 |
Apr 16, 2001 |
|
14 |
Discovery STS-102 |
Mar 8, 2001 |
Mar 21, 2001 |
|
15 |
Endeavour STS-100 |
Apr 19, 2001 |
May 1, 2001 |
Remote manipulator system (SSRMS) Canadarm-2 , UHF antenna |
16 |
Soyuz вЬ-32 |
Apr 28, 2001 |
Oct 31, 2001 |
|
17 |
Progress Ь1-6 |
May 21, 2001 |
Aug 22, 2001 |
|
On February 26, 2001, the Progress M-44 transport cargo vehicle was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome and it was docked to the side
port of the Russian Service module Zvezda. The cargo vehicle delivered
over 2.5 t payload to the ISS including about 730 kg of propellant for
refuelling the combined propulsion system of the Zvezda module, equipment
to perform biomedical experiments, tool kit for repair activities, consumables
for atmosphere purification system of living compartments as well as
the part of the equipment and materials required for life support and
activities of the next ISS prime crew.
The complex consisting of the Progress M-44 cargo vehicle,
Russian Service Module Zvezda, Functional Cargo Block Zarya,
Soyuz TM-31 manned vehicle, U.S. modules Unity and Destiny
was formed in orbit. The mass of the complex is about 112
t. On April 16 the Progress M-44 TCV was undocked from the
ISS and was de-orbited along the descent trajectory to the
oceanic area.
US Space Shuttle Discovery STS-102 (ISS deployment program, mission 5A.1) was launched on March 8, 2001 and docked with the ISS on March
10, 2001.
The crew consisted of: Russian cosmonaut Yury Usachev, NASA
astronauts James Wetherbee (Commander), Jim Kelly (Pilot),
Andy Thomas, Paul Richards, Jim Voss, Susan Helms (Mission
Specialists). The objective of the mission was to bring
to ISS the Expedition
Two crew (ISS-2) consisting of Yury Usachev, Jim Voss
and Susan Helms and return to Earth the Expedition One crew
(ISS-1) consisting of William Shepherd, Sergei Krikalev
and Yury Gidzenko who worked on-board the complex since
November 2, 2000.
Furthermore Discovery delivered to the Space Station the equipment for
outfitting US orbital segment including the equipment stowed in the
Italian logistics module Leonardo making its first flight to ISS, as
well as individual seat liners for ISS-2 crew, personal radiation monitoring
devices, water, air and food supplies.
During the joint flight American astronauts performed two EVAs. Three
ISS reboost maneuvers were performed using the thrusters. On March 19
Discovery crew performed undocking and on March 21 they successfully landed.
On April 19, 2001, Space Shuttle
Endeavour, STS-100, (the ISS assembly program, mission 6A) was launched
that docked with the ISS on April 21. The crew included NASA astronauts
Kent Rominger (commander), Jeffrey Ashby (pilot), Scott Parazynski,
John Phillips, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Lonchakov, a representative of
the European Space Agency Umberto Guidoni and a representative of the
Canadian Space Agency Chris Hadfield (mission specialists). The mission
purpose is to deliver and install Canadian Arm (Canadarm) on the station
to support activities outside the station, as well as an UHF antenna
to provide communication during extravehicular activity. More than 2700
kg of supplies and equipment was transferred to the station, including
those accommodated in the Raffaello Multi-purpose Logistics Module.
In the process of joint flight the U.S. astronauts conducted two space
walks. On April 29 the Endeavour crew performed undocking, and on May
1 they successfully landed.
On April 28, 2001, the Russian transport manned spacecraft
Soyuz TM-32 was launched by the Soyuz-Y launch vehicle from
the Baikonur cosmodrome (the ISS assembly program, mission
2S); the spacecraft docked to the station on April 30. The
first Russian visiting crew (VC-1) included Russian
cosmonauts Talgat Musabaev (commander), Yuri Baturin (flight
engineer) and U.S citizen Dennis Tito who visited the ISS
on-orbit complex as a space tourist. The mission purpose
is to conduct the scheduled replacement of the Soyuz TM-31
spacecraft that was a part of the ISS since November 2,
2000, fulfilling functions of a rescue vehicle, as well
as to implement work under the visiting program and to solve
the tasks of the ISS-2 crew mission technical support. On
May 6, 2001, the Soyuz TM-31 spacecraft descent vehicle
successfully returned to the Earth.
The ISS on-orbit complex functioned in the following complement: Soyuz
TM-32 spacecraft -Zvezda Service Module - Zarya Functional Cargo Module
- Unity Module - Destiny Module. The total mass of the complex was about
113.7 t.
May 21, 2001 saw the launch of logistics vehicle Progress
M1-6, which docked with the axial port of Service Module
Zvezda on May 23. The vehicle delivered about 1.3 tons of
dry cargo and 1.2 tons of propellant, including 0.96 tons
for refueling the combined propulsion system of Zvezda module.
The dry cargo includes scientific equipment, personal items
for the second expedition crew (ISS-2), food and medical
equipment, on-board documentation and parcels for the crew,
oxygen, equipment and hardware for outfitting on-board systems,
cargoes for atmospheric control, water supply and thermal
control systems. An orbital complex was established which
consists of: Russian manned spacecraft Soyuz TM-32 - Service
Module Zvezda - Functional and Cargo Module Zarya - US modules
Unity and Destiny - - logistics vehicle Progress M1-6. The
complex mass is about 120.5 tons. On August 22, 2001 logistics
vehicle Progress M1-6 undocked from ISS and was de-orbited
and brought down into Ocean.
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