STS-106

E881719

STS-106 was a 2000 NASA Space Shuttle Atlantis mission to the International Space Station focused on outfitting and preparing the station for its first long-duration crew.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf NASA spaceflight
Space Shuttle mission
apoapsis ~388 km
cargo Supplies and equipment for ISS Expedition 1
commander Terrence W. Wilcutt NERFINISHED
crewMember Boris V. Morukov NERFINISHED
Daniel C. Burbank NERFINISHED
Edward T. Lu NERFINISHED
Richard A. Mastracchio NERFINISHED
Scott D. Altman NERFINISHED
Terrence W. Wilcutt NERFINISHED
Yuri I. Malenchenko NERFINISHED
crewSize 7
EVAPerformedBy Edward T. Lu NERFINISHED
Yuri I. Malenchenko NERFINISHED
followedBy STS-92 NERFINISHED
inclination 51.6 degrees
ISSModuleWorkedOn Unity node
Zarya functional cargo block NERFINISHED
Zvezda service module NERFINISHED
landingDate 2000-09-20
landingSite Kennedy Space Center Shuttle Landing Facility NERFINISHED
launchDate 2000-09-08
launchSite Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39B NERFINISHED
launchVehicle Space Shuttle Atlantis NERFINISHED
missionDuration 11 days
11 days 19 hours 12 minutes
missionSpecialist Boris V. Morukov NERFINISHED
Daniel C. Burbank NERFINISHED
Edward T. Lu NERFINISHED
Richard A. Mastracchio NERFINISHED
Yuri I. Malenchenko NERFINISHED
missionType International Space Station assembly and logistics mission
notable First major outfitting mission of the ISS Zvezda service module
numberOfEVAs 1
operator NASA
orbitsCompleted 185
periapsis ~375 km
pilot Scott D. Altman NERFINISHED
precededBy STS-101 NERFINISHED
primaryObjective Outfitting the International Space Station
Preparing the ISS for its first long-duration crew
program NASA Space Shuttle program
surface form: Space Shuttle program
spacecraft Space Shuttle Atlantis NERFINISHED
totalEVATime 6 hours 14 minutes
visitedDestination International Space Station NERFINISHED
year 2000

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

OV-104 performedMission STS-106
STS-92 precededByMission STS-106
Scott D. Altman spaceMission STS-106