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Top Things to Know about Space Station Crew Handovers by Staff Writers Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Apr 30, 2021
The International Space Station is our home in low-Earth orbit. Humans have been living and working continuously on the station for more than 20 years. Astronauts and cosmonauts visiting the space station have arrived on the space shuttle, the Russian Soyuz, and now, the SpaceX Crew Dragon, with Boeing's CST-100 Starliner to be added to the mix. With these new flights on U.S. commercial spacecraft, the station is transitioning from indirect to direct crew handovers. What does this mean? Read below to find out.
What's the difference between a direct and indirect handover? When one crew of three reached the end of their mission, they would undock their Soyuz and return to Earth, temporarily leaving the station with three crew members aboard. A new crew of three would launch days or weeks later, returning the space station to a total number of six crew members. Now that the Commercial Crew Program has begun flying crews of four on U.S. commercial spacecraft, the full crew of the station has expanded to seven people. We now see what is called a direct handover. To ensure that the station is continuously staffed with astronauts and cosmonauts, a new crew launches and arrives at station before the prior crew returns to Earth. This results in a short period of time when there are more crew than usual aboard the station.
What's the most amount of people who have stayed on the International Space Station at one time? The launch and arrival of four astronauts on NASA's SpaceX Crew-2 mission resulted in 11 people living aboard the station during the direct handover period before the departure of Crew-1. This direct handover is the first time 11 long-duration crew members have lived aboard station. The last time exactly 11 people were aboard was in 2010; the station's crew size was temporarily reduced to five during Expedition 22, and the six-person space shuttle Endeavour crew on the STS-130 mission came for a visit from Feb. 9-19.
What do crew members do during handovers? Where do astronauts sleep while on the International Space Station during handover periods? As of April 2021, the International Space Station has seven permanent crew quarters, or personal spaces for astronauts to sleep and work during their stay on station. Each location provides a small pocket of privacy for astronauts and cosmonauts during their stay on orbit.
There are currently:
+ Four crew quarters in the U.S Harmony Module (also known as Node 2) When there are more astronauts aboard station than crew quarters, the crew members work with flight controllers to identify temporary "campout" locations for crew to sleep during the short handover period. These are typically located in modules with the least activity during the handover period, like the U.S. Quest Airlock or the Japanese Kibo Module, and can include docked spacecraft. For example, NASA's Mike Hopkins slept inside the Crew Dragon Resilience during his entire six-month stay aboard the station.
How often could we see crew handovers on the space station? Video: Crew Quarters Tour Inside the Space Station
Alpha: Second Space Station mission for ESA's Thomas Pesquet begins Paris (ESA) Apr 24, 2021 Today at 11:08 (CEST) the Crew Dragon spacecraft with ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet, NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Shane Kimbrough, and JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut Akihiko Hoshide docked with the International Space Station's Node-2 Harmony module, marking the start of ESA's six-month mission Alpha. The crew spent around 23 hours orbiting Earth and catching up with the International Space Station after their launch on 23 April at 10:49 BST (11:49 CEST, 05:49 local time) ... read more
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