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In February 2019, graphic designer and art director Jessie Bowers (Cypha) designed the Expedition 62 patch. This mission patch is the final ISS expedition insignia that bears the crew's surnames. All succeeding patches have no names in their graphics since the expedition member sizes has expanded to eleven individuals.
An expedition to the ISS refers to the crew that is occupying the space station and using it for research and testing. Expeditions can last up to six months and include between two and seven crew members. Expeditions are numbered starting from one and sequentially increased with each expedition.
24 June 2019 [62] Second time as commander. Expedition 59: Expedition 60: Aleksey Ovchinin [62] 24 June 2019 [62] 2 October 2019 [63] Expedition 61: Luca Parmitano [63] 2 October 2019 [63] 6 February 2020 [64] First Italian national as commander. Expedition 62: Oleg Skripochka [64] 6 February 2020 [64] 15 April 2020 [65] Expedition 63: Chris ...
Current ISS crew names are in bold. The suffix (twice, thrice, ...) refers to the individual's number of spaceflights to the ISS, not the total number of spaceflights. Entries are noted with for women and for men. This list only includes crew members of the ISS. For a list including non-crew, see List of visitors to the International Space Station.
The Expedition 6 crew returned in Soyuz TMA-1 a few days later 23. 7S Soyuz TMA-3 Launch: October 18, 2003 Time docked: ~192 days Alexander Kaleri. Michael Foale Pedro Duque. Deliver Expedition 8 crew. Duque returned with the Expedition 7 crew on Soyuz TMA-2 a few days later 24. 8S Soyuz TMA-4 Launch: April 19, 2004 Time docked: ~185 days ...
On April 9, during the final days of Expedition 62, the crew were joined by the three crew members of Soyuz MS-16, Russian cosmonauts Anatoli Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner as well as NASA astronaut Christopher Cassidy. [14]
Soyuz MS-16 was a Soyuz spaceflight launched on 9 April 2020, [3] which transported three members of the Expedition 62/63 crew to the International Space Station. [6]This flight was the first crewed launch using the Soyuz 2.1a launch vehicle, and the first crewed Russian mission not to launch from Gagarin's Start since Soyuz MS-02 in 2016.
Until it is repaired P4 will use the old batteries left on the station as spares. Get aheads included installing gap spanners and breaking torque on the P6 batteries in preparation for their replacement by Expedition 62 crew members this summer. Hague also inspected sockets on P6 so the foot restraints could be attached.