Jurij Malentjenko
Jurij Malentjenko Юрий Иванович Маленченко | |
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Kosmonaut | |
Statsborger | Sovjetunionen, Rusland |
Nationalitet | Russer |
Født | 22. december 1961 Svitlovodsk, Ukraine |
Andet arbejde | Pilot |
Tid i rummet | 514 dage 12 timer |
Udvælgelse | 1987 |
Mission(er) | Sojus TM-19, STS-106, Sojus TMA-2, ISS Expedition 7, Sojus TMA-11 ISS Ekspedition 16 |
Missionsemblemer |
Jurij Ivanovitj Malentjenko ((russisk) Юрий Иванович Маленченко) (født 22. december 1961 i Ukraine (daværende Sovjetunionen) er en kosmonaut, der har været del af besætningerne på både Mir og den Internationale Rumstation.
Malentjenko ankommer med ISS Ekspedition 16 til den Internationale Rumstation.
Malentjenko og Peggy Whitson på rumvandring.
Eksterne henvisninger
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Medier brugt på denne side
This patch commemorates the sixteenth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The design represents the conjunction of two unique astronomical events: a transit of the ISS across the surface of a full moon, and a nearly complete annular eclipse of the sun. The ISS is shown in its complete configuration, symbolizing the role of this expedition in preparing for the arrival and commissioning of international partner modules and components. The ISS transit across the moon highlights its role in developing the techniques and innovations critical to enable long-duration expeditions to the lunar surface and beyond.
The Soyuz TMA-2 spacecraft carrying cosmonaut Yuri I. Malenchenko, Expedition 7 mission commander; astronaut Edward T. Lu, NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer; and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Pedro Duque of Spain is photographed on the ground after landing in Kazakhstan on October 27, 2003 at 9:41 p.m. (EST).
The International Space Station (ISS) Expedition Seven patch consists of two elliptical orbits which evoke the histories of the two space programs from which the crew is drawn. The Russian and American flags are intersecting, representing the peaceful cooperation of the many countries contributing to the ISS. Two stars indicate the Station's goals of contributing to life on Earth through science and commerce.
Soyuz TMA-11 approaches the International Space Station, carrying NASA astronaut Peggy A. Whitson, Expedition 16 commander; cosmonaut Yuri I. Malenchenko, Soyuz commander and flight engineer representing Russia's Federal Space Agency; and Malaysian spaceflight participant Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor.
The official crew patch for the Russian Soyuz TM-19 mission, which delivered the EO-16 crew to the space station Mir.
The patch was redrawn by Jorge Cartes (JCR) from Spacepatches.nl
Astronaut Peggy Whitson (right) and cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko participate in a session of extravehicular activity as construction continues on the International Space Station.
This is the crew patch for the STS-106 mission, which is the first Shuttle flight to the International Space Station since the arrival of its newest component, the Russian-supplied Service Module Zvezda (Russian for star). Zvezda is depicted on the crew patch mated with the already orbiting Node 1 Unity module and Russian-built Functional Cargo Block, called Zarya (sunrise), with a Progress supply vehicle docked to the rear of the Station. The International Space Station is shown in orbit with Earth above as it appears from the perspective of space. The Astronaut Office symbol, a star with three rays of light, provides a connection between the Space Shuttle Atlantis and the Space Station, much the same as the Space Shuttle Program is linked to the International Space Station during its construction and future research operations. Stylized versions of flags from Russia and the United States meet at the Space Station. They symbolize both the cooperation and joint efforts of the two countries during the development and deployment of the permanent outpost in space as well as the close relationship of the American and Russian crew members.