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Expedition 16

16th Long-duration mission to the International Space Station


16th Long-duration mission to the International Space Station

FieldValue
nameExpedition 16
imageExpedition 16 The Matrix crew poster.jpg
image_captionPromotional Poster
insigniaISS Expedition 16 Patch.svg
insignia_captionExpedition 16 mission patch
mission_typeLong-duration expedition
mission_duration192 days (launch to landing)
crew_size3
crew_membersPeggy Whitson
Yuri Malenchenko
Clayton Anderson* (October)
Daniel Tani (October–February)
Léopold Eyharts (February–March)
Garrett Reisman† (March–April)
* - transferred from Expedition 15
† - transferred to Expedition 17
crew_EVAs5
crew_EVA_duration35 hours, 21 minutes
crew_photoExpedition 16 Portrait.jpg
crew_photo_captionThe official Expedition 16 crew portrait. (left to right) Anderson, Malenchenko, Tani, Eyharts, Whitson, Reisman
space_stationInternational Space Station
start_date
end_dateUTC
arrival_craftSoyuz TMA-11
Anderson: STS-117
Tani: STS-120
Eyharts: STS-122
Reisman: STS-123
departure_craftSoyuz TMA-11
Anderson: STS-120
Tani: STS-122
Eyharts: STS-123
Reisman: STS-124
previous_missionExpedition 15
next_missionExpedition 17
programmeISS expeditions

Yuri Malenchenko Clayton Anderson* (October) Daniel Tani (October–February) Léopold Eyharts (February–March) Garrett Reisman† (March–April)

    • transferred from Expedition 15 † - transferred to Expedition 17

Anderson: STS-117

Tani: STS-120

Eyharts: STS-122

Reisman: STS-123

Anderson: STS-120

Tani: STS-122

Eyharts: STS-123

Reisman: STS-124

Expedition 16 was the 16th expedition to the International Space Station (ISS). The first two crew members, Yuri Malenchenko and Peggy Whitson, launched on 10 October 2007, aboard Soyuz TMA-11, and were joined by spaceflight participant Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, the first Malaysian in space.

Expedition 15 Flight Engineer Clayton Anderson did not land with the Soyuz TMA-10, so he was considered part of Expedition 16 for the few weeks prior to the arrival of STS-120. STS-120 launched on 23 October, docked on 25 October, and replaced Anderson with new Flight Engineer Daniel Tani. Following docking, the Soyuz seat liners for Anderson and Tani were swapped, and Anderson became part of the STS-120 crew. Léopold Eyharts, who came aboard during STS-122, joined the mission on 9 February 2008, replacing Tani. The crew was then joined by Garrett Reisman, who was launched aboard Endeavour with STS-123, on 11 March 2008, replacing Eyharts. Reisman joined Expedition 16 in progress, and was a part of Expedition 17 as well. Upon reentry, the astronaut's Soyuz TMA-11 spacecraft suffered a minor malfunction, causing the craft to follow a very steep ballistic descent. As a result, the crew experienced forces up to 10 G, ending up about 260 miles (418 km) west of the targeted landing site. Roscosmos reported all three crew members were doing just fine and in good health.

Crew

PositionFirst Part
(October 2007)Second Part
(October 2007 to February 2008)Third Part
(February to March 2008)Fourth Part
(March to April 2008)CommanderFlight Engineer 1Flight Engineer 2
USA Peggy Whitson, NASA
Second spaceflight
RUS Yuri Malenchenko, RSA
Fourth spaceflight
USA Clayton Anderson, NASA
First spaceflightUSA Daniel Tani, NASA
Second and last spaceflightFRA Léopold Eyharts, ESA
Second and last spaceflightUSA Garrett Reisman, NASA
First spaceflight

Backup crew

  • USA Michael Fincke Commander - NASA (for Whitson)
  • RUS Salizhan Sharipov Flight Engineer 1 - RSA (for Malenchenko)
  • USA Greg Chamitoff Flight Engineer 2 - NASA (for Anderson)
  • USA Sandra Magnus Flight Engineer 2 - NASA (for Tani)
  • BEL Frank De Winne Flight Engineer 2 - ESA (for Eyharts)
  • USA Timothy Kopra Flight Engineer 2 - NASA (for Reisman)

Mission details

  • Docked: 12 October 2007 14:50 UTC
  • Undocked: 19 April 2008 6:06 UTC
  • Time docked: 192 days

Expedition 16 was the first ISS mission to include two crew members who had served on a previous expedition, and the first time a former commander (Malenchenko) returned as a flight engineer. Whitson was the first female commander of an ISS expedition, and with STS-120 commanded by female astronaut Pamela Melroy, it marked the first time that two female mission commanders were in orbit simultaneously. On her first expedition, Whitson implemented a "Friday night movie night" to help the crew wind down at the end of the week, and plans to keep the custom of adding some levity to the station going for Expedition 16. Anderson incorporated some entertainment into the daily planning conference with the ground, quizzing the ground team on a wide variety of subjects, and Michael Lopez-Alegria did a similar activity with movie and music trivia.

STS-120

The first major objective of the increment was accomplished successfully on 26 October, when the crew of STS-120 delivered the Harmony module, and attached it to a temporary location on the Unity module. The new addition added over 2500 cuft to the station's living volume. The joint crews also moved the P6 truss, and relocated it from its position on top of the station, to its final port-side position, during the third of four spacewalks.

Configuration of ''Harmony''

Crew members pose for a Christmas photo in [[Zvezda (ISS module)

Following the departure of STS-120, a series of Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) and robotic activities were carried out to move the Pressurized Mating Adapter (PMA-2) from the end of the Destiny laboratory, to the end of Harmony. Whitson and Malenchenko carried out the increment's first EVA on 9 November, that prepared the docking port for relocation. On 12 November, Whitson and Tani used the station's Mobile Servicing System (robotic arm) to detach the docking port, and relocated it to the forward port of Harmony. On 14 November, the Tani and Whitson again used the robotic arm and moved Harmony from its temporary location, to its permanent location on the forward port of Destiny.

On 20 November, Whitson and Tani completed the second EVA for the increment, a 7-hour, 16-minute spacewalk to outfit the Harmony node in its new position. All tasks were accomplished, and three get-ahead tasks were performed. On 24 November, Whitson and Tani completed the third EVA for the increment, a 7-hour, 4-minute spacewalk to complete the outfitting of Harmony. All task were accomplished, and photographic inspection of the starboard Solar Alpha Rotary Joint (SARJ) was performed, as well as some ISS maintenance get-ahead tasks.

EVA milestone

On 18 December 2007, during the fourth spacewalk of Expedition 16 to inspect the S4 starboard Solar Alpha Rotary Joint (SARJ), the ground team in Mission Control informed Whitson that she had become the female astronaut with the most cumulative EVA time in NASA history, as well as the most EVAs, with her fifth EVA. Three hours and 37 minutes into the spacewalk, Whitson surpassed NASA astronaut Sunita Williams with a total time at that point of 29 hours and 18 minutes. At the completion of Whitson's fifth EVA, the 100th in support of ISS assembly and maintenance, Whitson's cumulative EVA time became 32 hours, and 36 minutes, which placed her in 20th place for total EVA time.

STS-122

STS-122 delivered Columbus and replaced Dan Tani with Léopold Eyharts.

STS-123

STS-123 delivered the first element of Kibō and replaced Léopold Eyharts with Garrett Reisman.

ATV ''Jules-Verne''

Expedition 16 also saw the arrival of the first Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) to the station, named Jules Verne after the science fiction author.

Soyuz TMA-12

Expedition 16 also saw the arrival of the first Korean astronaut, Yi So-yeon.

Extra-vehicular activity

**Mission****Spacewalkers****Start (UTC)****End (UTC)****Duration**
EVA 1
Peggy Whitson
Yuri Malenchenko9 November 2007
09:549 November,
16:496 hours, 55 minutes
SSPTS cable disconnect and stowage, PMA-2 umbilical stowage, Node 2 avionics umbilical temp stowed.
EVA 2
Whitson
Daniel M. Tani20 November 2007
10:1020 November,
17:267 hours, 16 minutes
External configuration of PMA-2 and *Harmony*: Fluid, electrical, and data line hookups, avionics line hookup, heater cable hookups, Fluid tray relocation.
EVA 3
Whitson
Tani24 November 2007
09:5024 November,
16:547 hours, 04 minutes
Completion of fluid, electrical, and data line hookups for PMA-2 and *Harmony*. Loop B Fluid Tray connection to port side of *Destiny*. Photographic analysis of starboard Solar Alpha Rotary Joint (SARJ) to assist with troubleshooting on the ground, re-installation of CETA cart from a temporary stowage location.
EVA 4
Whitson
Tani18 December 2007
09:5018 December,
16:466 hours, 56 minutes
Inspection of the S4 starboard Solar Alpha Rotary Joint (SARJ), and a Beta Gimbal Assembly (BGA). The EVA is the 100th in support of building the International Space Station.
EVA 5
Whitson
Tani30 January 2008
09:5630 January,
17:067 hours, 10 minutes
Replacement of a Bearing Motor Roll Ring Module (BMRRM) in the S4 starboard Beta Gimbal Assembly (BGA), further inspection of the Solar Alpha Rotary Joint (SARJ).

References

References

  1. NASA. (2007). "STS-120". [[NASA.
  2. NASA. (2007). "NASA Announces Three International Space Station Crews". NASA.
  3. SpaceDaily. (2007). "Expedition 16 Crew To Launch From Baikonur". Space Travel Exploration and Tourism - SpaceDaily.
  4. Tariq Malik. (2007). "Space Station Astronauts Prepare for Crew Swap". Space.com.
  5. William Harwood. (2007). "Discovery docks with space station". CBS News.
  6. UPI. (2007). "Discovery successfully docks at the ISS". [[United Press International]].
  7. Spacefacts. (2007). "Expedition 16". Spacefacts.
  8. (19 April 2008). "Soyuz crew endures severe G-forces on re-entry - CNN.com". CNN.
  9. Tariq Malik. (4 October 2007). "Astronauts Ponder State of Space Exploration". Fox News.
  10. NASA. (2007). "Female Space Commanders Available for Interviews". NASA.
  11. Tariq Malik. (2007). "Female commanders set for landmark mission". NBC News.
  12. Internet Broadcasting Systems, Inc.. (2007). "History in Space: 2 Women Commanders". Local6.com Internet Broadcasting Systems, Inc..
  13. Gina Sunseri. (2007). "Space Boredom Busters: Movies, Music, Jokes". [[ABC News (United States).
  14. William Harwood for [[CBS]] News. (2007). "Harmony module pulled from cargo bay". Spaceflight Now.
  15. John Schwartz. (26 October 2007). "New Room Added to Space Station". The New York Times.
  16. Liz Austin Peterson. (2007). "Astronauts Attach Space Station Addition". ABC News / The Associated Press.
  17. NASA. (2007). "Station Spacewalk Prepares for PMA, Harmony Moves". NASA.
  18. Frank Morring Jr.. (2007). "ISS Crew Moves Harmony Node". [[Aviation Week]].
  19. NASA. (2007). "Harmony Moved to Front of Space Station". NASA.
  20. NASA. (2007). "Spacewalkers Harmonize on Node Hookup Tasks". NASA.
  21. NASA. (2007). "Spacewalkers Complete More Harmony Hookup Work". NASA.
  22. NASA. (2007). "ISS On-Orbit Status report 11/24/07". NASA.
  23. Tariq Malik. (2007). "Space Station Commander Breaks Spacewalking Record". Space.com.
  24. NASA. (2007). "Spacewalkers Find No Solar Wing Smoking Gun". NASA.
  25. NASA. (2007). "International Space Station Daily Report: 11/20/07". NASA.
  26. (18 December 2007). "Astronauts Take Spacewalk to Inspect Defective Solar Wing Mechanisms". Fox News.
  27. NASA. (2008). "Spacewalkers Replace Solar Wing Motor". NASA.
  28. and
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