|
Peggy Whitson Breaks
Space Record
April 21, 2008
Commander Peggy Whitson and cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko of the 16th
International Space Station crew landed on the steppes of Kazakhstan
around 4:30 a.m. EDT Saturday after 192 days in space.
Commander
Peggy Whitson
All three people aboard the Soyuz TMA-11 spacecraft were reported to be
in good condition after their re-entry and landing.
The landing was approximately 295 miles from the expected landing site,
delaying the recovery forces’ arrival to the spacecraft by approximately
45 minutes.
With Whitson and Malenchenko was spaceflight participant So-yeon Yi. She
launched to the station April 8 with the Expedition 17 crew, Commander
Sergei Volkov and Flight Engineer Oleg Kononenko, under contract with
the Russian Federal Space Agency.
Astronaut Garrett Reisman came to the station aboard Endeavour on its
STS-123 mission, launched March 11. He served for the last few weeks as
a member of Expedition 16. He remains aboard as a member of the
Expedition 17 crew.
Expedition 16 crew members undocked their Soyuz spacecraft from the
station at 1: 06 a.m. Saturday. The deorbit burn to slow the Soyuz and
begin its descent toward the Earth took place at 3:40 a.m.
When they landed, Whitson and Malenchenko had spent 192 days in space on
their Expedition 16 flight, 190 of them on the station.
A
camera aboard the International Space Station captured this image of the
Soyuz TMA-11 spacecraft shortly after undocking.
Whitson, 48, returned from her second mission to the station. She served
as a flight engineer on the Expedition 5 crew, launching June 5, 2002,
and returning to Earth Dec. 7 after almost 185 days in space.
She landed Saturday with a total of 377 days in space, more than any
other U.S. spacefarer. On April 16 she broke the previous mark of 374
days set by Mike Foale on his six flights. 
She holds a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Rice University in Houston. She
began working for NASA as a research biochemist in 1989 and was selected
as an astronaut in 1996.
Malenchenko, 46, a Russian Air Force colonel, is making his third
long-duration spaceflight. He spent 126 days aboard the Russian space
station Mir beginning July 1, 1994, and commanded Expedition 7, spending
185 days in space beginning April 26, 2006. He also was a member of the
STS-106 crew of Atlantis on an almost-12-day mission to the station
beginning Sept. 8, 2000.
He landed Saturday with a total of 515 days in space on his four
flights. He has the ninth highest total of cumulative time in space of
all humans. |