The Southgate Amateur Radio Club - the amateur radio site for all radio hams
Google
  Web southgatearc.org   
www.southgatearc.org





   
NASA astronaut Jeffrey Williams KD5TVQ

Expedition 21 crew arrives at the International Space Station

Flight Engineers Jeff Williams KD5TVQ and Maxim Suraev along with spaceflight participant Guy Laliberté have arrived at the International Space Station.

They docked their Soyuz
TMA-16 to the aft end of the Zvezda service module at 4:35 a.m. EDT Friday.
They launched Wednesday at 3:14 a.m. from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan.

The newest station crew members entered the station after opening the hatches between the two spacecraft at 6:57 a.m.

The Soyuz TMA-16 docks at the International Space Station

Williams and Suraev are relieving Expedition 20 Commander Gennady Padalka, KD5MIJ, and Flight Engineer Michael Barratt, KD5MIJ, who will depart in several days with their Canadian visitor, Laliberté. The three crew members will enter the Soyuz TMA-14 and undock from the Pirs docking compartment at 9:05 p.m. EDT on Oct. 10. They will land in Kazakhstan about three and a half hours later.

Their departure signifies the end of Expedition 20 and the start of Expedition 21. European astronaut Frank De Winne, ON1DWN, will have completed his duties as Expedition 20 Flight Engineer and assumed command of the International Space Station. De Winne, of the European Space Agency, arrived at the station May 29, 2009. He is scheduled to return to Earth on Dec. 1, 2009 in the same vehicle in which he arrived, the Soyuz TMA-15, which is attached to Zarya’s Earth-facing port. De Winne’s departure in December will leave Jeff Williams in charge of the station as Expedition 22 commander.

Also continuing their stays aboard the station and transitioning to Expedition 21 are Flight Engineers Nicole Stott, KE5GJN, Roman Romanenko and Robert Thirsk, VA3CSA.

On his way home - Gennady Padalka RN3DT

Thirsk and Romanenko will continue their long-duration stay until they depart with De Winne. Stott who arrived Aug. 30 aboard space shuttle Discovery will return home in November aboard space shuttle Atlantis.

Atlantis is scheduled to be the last space shuttle to transport a station crew member when it leaves the International Space Station with Nicole Stott on the
STS-129 mission. The Russian Soyuz spacecraft will continue crew transportation to and from the orbiting laboratory.

Williams, Padalka and De Winne are all space station veterans. For Williams, Expedition 21 is his third stay aboard the station. His first visit was during shuttle mission STS-101 in May 2000 and then he served as a flight engineer during Expedition 13 in 2006. Expedition 21 is De Winne’s second station mission. He visited the station as part of a Soyuz taxi mission in late 2002. In addition to commanding Expeditions 19 and 20, Padalka was the Expedition 9 commander in 2004.

 

 

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

 

 
QRZ Callsign Search
Latest news stories..

News Front Page
Get our news headlines for your website
Submit your news story

Get the News Headlines delivered by email
Enter your email address:
Delivered by FeedBurner

 

 
Home   Send this page to a friend   News
Index