Difference between revisions of "STS-13W"

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|agency5_up      = [[Image:Flag of Mexico.svg|border|22px|Mexico]] [[Wikipedia:Mexico|Mexico]]
 
|agency5_up      = [[Image:Flag of Mexico.svg|border|22px|Mexico]] [[Wikipedia:Mexico|Mexico]]
 
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|notes            = This mission marks the first time that a citizen from Israel or Mexico has visited the International Space Station, and is the second time a person from either country has successfully completed a spaceflight.
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|notes            = This mission marks the first time that a citizen from Israel or Mexico has visited the International Space Station.
 
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Revision as of 00:21, 11 November 2013

STS-13W
Mission insignia
Shuttle Patch.svg
Mission statistics
Mission nameSTS-13W
Space shuttlePatriot
Launch padMid-Pacific Launch Center, SLC-1
Launch dateMarch 15, 2010
6:35 a.m. UTC-12
(March 15, 2010, 18:35 UTC)
LandingMarch 27, 2010
8:07 a.m. UTC-12
(March 28, 2010, 20:07 UTC)
Mission duration13 days, 1 hours, 32 minutes, 34 seconds
Number of orbits205
Orbital period92 min
Orbital altitude221 miles (356 km)
Orbital inclination51.6°
Distance traveled5,157,595 miles
(8,300,344.57 kilometers)
Related missions
Previous mission Next mission
STS-12W STS-12W STS-14W STS-14W

STS-13W was a Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station (ISS) that launched on March 15, 2010. The mission, flown by the Space Shuttle Patriot, was the second mission on behalf of the International Space Agency flown to the ISS. The mission's primary payload was the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Michelangelo, which carried a number of supplies and experiments intended to increase the amount of time allowable between ISS cargo flights due to the retirement of NASA's Space Shuttle fleet. This was also the last time that a space shuttle launched from the Mid-Pacific Launch Center. Following this mission, all subsequent shuttle missions dedicated to space station construction and resupply launched from the Kennedy Space Center.

Crew

Position Astronaut
Commander Roger Mason
Second spaceflight
Pilot Sarah Engels
Second spaceflight
Mission Specialist 1 Jason Connors
Second spaceflight
Lead spacewalker, EV1
Mission Specialist 2 Ehud Shalom, Israel Israel
First spaceflight
EV2
Mission Specialist 3 Ignacio Alvarez, Mexico Mexico
First spaceflight
This mission marks the first time that a citizen from Israel or Mexico has visited the International Space Station.