Mission type | ISS Expedition |
---|---|
Mission duration | 124 days, 22 hours, 47 minutes (at ISS) 128 days, 20 hours, 45 minutes, 58 seconds (launch to landing) |
Distance travelled | 85,860,485 kilometres (53,351,232 mi) |
Orbits completed | 2,020 |
Expedition | |
Space Station | International Space Station |
Began | 12 August 2001, 18:41 UTC | UTC
Ended | 15 December 2001, 17:28 UTC | UTC
Arrived aboard |
STS-105 Space Shuttle Discovery |
Departed aboard |
STS-108 Space Shuttle Endeavour |
Crew | |
Crew size | 3 |
Members |
Frank Culbertson Vladimir Dezhurov Mikhail Tyurin |
EVAs | 4 |
EVA duration | 17 hours, 50 minutes |
L-R: Mikhail Tyurin, Frank Culbertson, and Vladimir Dezhurov |
Expedition 3 was the third expedition to the International Space Station. Commander Frank Culbertson was the only American crew member, and as such the only American not on Earth during the 9/11 attacks, which the crew photographed and videoed from the ISS.
Research in space begun by two previous crews aboard the International Space Station (ISS) expanded during the Expedition Three mission. The third resident crew launched on 10 August 2001 on Space Shuttle Discovery during mission STS-105 and took control of the complex on 13 August 2001. The crew conducted a science-intensive increment and completed four spacewalks. The Expedition Three crew ended their 117-day residency on board the ISS on 8 December 2001 when their custom Soyuz seat-liners were transferred to Space Shuttle Endeavour for the return trip home during mission STS-108.
The Expedition Three crew of the International Space Station enjoyed a unique view of the 2001 Leonid meteor storm. "It looked like we were seeing UFOs approaching the earth flying in formation, three or four at a time," recalls astronaut Frank Culbertson. "There were hundreds per minute going beneath us, really spectacular!" News reports had warned sky watchers in advance: On 18 November 2001, Earth was due to plow through a minefield of debris shed by Comet Tempel-Tuttle. Innumerable bits of comet dust would become meteors when they hit Earth's atmosphere at 144,000 miles per hour (64,000 m/s). Experts predicted an unforgettable display ... and it came. Millions of people saw the show, but only three of them—the ones on board the space station—saw it from above. "We had to look down to see the meteors," says Culbertson. "That's because the atmosphere (where comet dust burns up) is below the station."