Expedition 13

Expedition 13
Promotional poster
Mission typeLong-duration expedition
Mission duration180 days, 17 hours, 34 minutes (at ISS)
182 days, 23 hours, 44 minutes (launch to landing)
Orbits completed2,886
Expedition
Space stationInternational Space Station
Began1 April 2006, 04:19 (2006-04-01UTC04:19Z) UTC
Ended28 September 2006, 21:53 (2006-09-28UTC21:54Z) UTC
Arrived aboardSoyuz TMA-8
Reiter: STS-121
Space Shuttle Discovery
Departed aboardSoyuz TMA-8
Reiter: STS-116
Space Shuttle Discovery
Crew
Crew size2
3 (from July)
MembersPavel Vinogradov
Jeffrey Williams
Thomas Reiter* (from July)
* – Transferred to Expedition 14
EVAs2
EVA duration12 hours, 25 minutes

Expedition 13 mission patch

Expedition 13 was the 13th expedition to the International Space Station (ISS), and launched at 02:30 UTC on 30 March 2006.[1] The expedition used the Soyuz TMA-8 spacecraft, which stayed at the station for the duration of the expedition for emergency evacuation.

Astronaut Marcos Pontes launched with Expedition 13 on the Soyuz TMA-8 spacecraft and became the first Brazilian in space. He returned with Expedition 12 on Soyuz TMA-7 after a nine-day mission.

Thomas Reiter, from the European Space Agency, became part of the Expedition 13 crew in July 2006. Reiter was launched with the second "Return to Flight" mission on Discovery (STS-121) on 4 July 2006. Reiter became the first European long-duration crew member on the International Space Station when he officially joined the crew of the ISS at 19:13 UTC on 6 July 2006 upon the complete installation of his Soyuz spacecraft seat liner, allowing him to return to Earth aboard the docked Soyuz craft.

Reiter's arrival restored the station crew to three members for the first time since May 2003. The station's crew size had been reduced to two when shuttle flights were put on hold after the Space Shuttle Columbia accident on 1 February 2003.

  1. ^ NASA (2006). "Expedition 13". NASA. Retrieved 25 December 2008.