New Space Station Residents on Fast Track to Orbital Laboratory

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May 28, 2013

Rachel Kraft 
Headquarters, Washington                                
202-358-1100 
rachel.h.kraft@xxxxxxxx 

Josh Byerly 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
josh.byerly@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 13-155

NEW SPACE STATION RESIDENTS ON FAST TRACK TO ORBITAL LABORATORY

WASHINGTON -- Three new Expedition 36 crew members lifted off from the 
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 4:31 p.m. EDT, Tuesday, May 28, 
(2:31 a.m. Kazakh time, Wednesday, May 29) on a six-hour flight to 
the International Space Station. 

NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg, Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin and 
Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency are scheduled to dock 
their Soyuz spacecraft with the orbiting laboratory at 10:16 p.m. 
This will be only the second time a crew has arrives at the space 
station less than a day after launch. Previously, the standard time 
from launch to docking was two days. 

NASA Television will provide live coverage of the rendezvous and 
docking beginning at 9:30 p.m. 

Nyberg, Yurchikhin and Parmitano will join NASA astronaut Chris 
Cassidy and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin and Pavel 
Vinogradov, who arrived at the station in March. These six crew 
members will comprise Expedition 36 for the next several months. 

The crew will have an especially busy schedule this summer. In June, 
Expedition 36 will welcome the arrival of the European Automated 
Transfer Vehicle-4 cargo spacecraft, followed at the end of the month 
by a spacewalk by Yurchikhin and Misurkin. In July, Cassidy and 
Parmitano will perform two spacewalks, followed soon afterword by the 
arrival of a Russian cargo ship. This summer, a Japanese HTV cargo 
spacecraft will deliver supplies to the space station, followed by 
two more spacewalks by Yurchikhin and Misurkin. 

Expedition 36 also will add several key investigations to more than 
1,600 experiments that have taken place so far aboard the station. 
The crew will examine ways to maintain bone health, yielding 
important information about how the human body adapts to space and 
improving understanding of osteoporosis and its countermeasures. They 
will continue research into how plants grow, leading to more 
efficient crops on Earth and improving understanding of how future 
crews could grow their own food in space. The crew also will test a 
new portable gas monitor designed to help analyze the environment 
inside the spacecraft and continue fuel and combustion experiments 
that past crews have undertaken. Studying how fire behaves in space 
will have a direct impact on future spaceflight and could lead to 
cleaner, more efficient combustion engines on Earth. 

For information on the International Space Station or the Expedition 
36 crew, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/station 

To follow Twitter updates from Expedition 36 astronauts, visit: 

http://twitter.com/AstroKarenN 

and 

http://twitter.com/astro_luca 

For NASA TV streaming video, schedule and downlink information, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/ntv 

	
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