International Space Station Status Report: SS06-017

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April 14, 2006

Joe Pally
Headquarters, Washington
(202) 358-7239

James Hartsfield
Johnson Space Center, Houston
(281) 483-5111

STATUS REPORT: SS06-017

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT: SS06-017

The 13th crew of the International Space Station is wrapping up its 
first week flying solo in its new orbiting home. The crew's work has 
included station maintenance, medical and other experiments and 
standard daily exercise.

Expedition 13 Commander Pavel Vinogradov and Flight Engineer and NASA 
Science Officer Jeff Williams said farewell to their predecessors 
last Saturday. The Expedition 12 crew and a visiting Brazilian 
astronaut undocked that afternoon and landed in Kazakhstan at 7:48 
p.m. EDT.

Vinogradov and Williams had light duty Sunday and Monday, a break 
after completing eight days of extensive handover activities with 
their counterparts.

Maintenance work included a three-and-one-half hour scheduled 
replacement of station toilet components on Tuesday. Both crew 
members also took time to talk with two Russian news organizations 
and participants at a Russian school children's aerospace festival.

On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin called the crew from 
the Kremlin. Putin's call came on the 45th anniversary of the first 
human spaceflight by Yuri Gagarin, a landmark event commemorated by 
the Russian holiday Cosmonautics Day. That date, April 12, was also 
the 25th anniversary of the first NASA space shuttle launch in 1981.

Putin told the crew it was a pleasure to see representatives of the 
United States and Russia working together on the same spacecraft. 
During the light-hearted exchange, Vinogradov invited Putin to visit 
the space station.

The crew continued loading the station's Progress cargo craft with 
trash and conducted physical evaluations and experiments Thursday. 
Vinogradov and Williams practiced an emergency evacuation drill 
Friday. Throughout the week, they had time to familiarize themselves 
with their new home.

Vinogradov and Williams will remain in orbit for six months. During 
that time, they plan to welcome two space shuttles and perform two 
spacewalks. Shuttle Discovery's STS-121 mission, targeting a launch 
no earlier than July 1, will bring European Space Agency astronaut 
Thomas Reiter aboard the station.

Reiter will increase the station crew size to three for the first time 
since May 2003 when the crew size was reduced to conserve station 
supplies following the Columbia accident.

Back on Earth for almost a week, Expedition 12 Commander Bill McArthur 
and Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev remain in Star City, Russia, near 
Moscow. They continue to undergo debriefing and rehabilitation after 
190 days in space. With them is Marcos Pontes, Brazil's first 
astronaut, who launched with Expedition 13. He returned to Earth with 
the Expedition 12 crew after spending about eight days on the station 
conducting experiments.

Tentative plans call for McArthur to return to Houston later this 
month. The next status report will be issued Friday, April 21, or 
earlier if events warrant.

Information on the crew's activities aboard the space station, future 
launch dates, and station sighting opportunities are available at:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
-end-



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