Space
Station Marks Human Presence Milestone On Nov. 2, 2001, the International
Space Station marks a milestone in space history -- one full year of continuous
international human presence in orbit that has seen the station become
the largest, most sophisticated and most powerful spacecraft ever built.
Residents In its first year of permanent
occupation, the International Space Station was home to nine long-term
residents, including five Russian cosmonauts and four NASA astronauts.
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Visitors Six space shuttle
crews and three Soyuz taxi crews visited the station during
the first year. |
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First-Person Space station residents and visitors had a lot to say
about the new outpost. |
"As
the most forward deployed citizens of Earth at this moment… we are opening
a gateway to space for all humankind."
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Expedition One crew
holiday greeting,
Dec. 29, 2000 |
Additions Several new structures
and modules were added to the station, transforming its appearance and
capability.
Gallery Visit the International
Space Station gallery for videos, photos and other imagery of the developing
outpost.
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Facts
and Figures | Total
residents and visitors since start of assembly: | 79 | men: | 68 | women: | 11 | Crewmember
nationality since start of assembly: | U.S.: | 58 | Russia: | 15 | Canada: | 3 | Italy: | 1 | France: | 1 | Japan: | 1 | Spacewalks since
start of assembly: | 28 | Shuttle-based: | 24 | Station-based: | 4 | Expedition
crew mission duration from time of official handover: | Expedition
One: | 138
Days 17:39:00 | Expedition
Two: | 165
Days 04:10:00 | Expedition
Three: | 83
days (approx.) |
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