STS-113

STS-113
Lopez-Alegria climbs the newly-installed P1 truss during the mission's second EVA
NamesSpace Transportation System-113
Mission typeISS assembly
Crew rotation
OperatorNASA
COSPAR ID2002-052A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.27556
Mission duration13 days, 18 hours, 48 minutes, 38 seconds
Distance travelled9,000,000 kilometres (5,600,000 mi)
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftSpace Shuttle Endeavour
Launch mass116,460 kilograms (256,750 lb)
Landing mass91,498 kilograms (201,719 lb)
Payload mass12,477 kilograms (27,507 lb)
Crew
Crew size7
Members
Launching
Landing
Start of mission
Launch date24 November 2002, 00:49:47 (2002-11-24UTC00:49:47Z) UTC
Launch siteKennedy, LC-39A
End of mission
Landing date7 December 2002, 19:38:25 (2002-12-07UTC19:38:26Z) UTC
Landing siteKennedy, SLF Runway 33
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Perigee altitude379 kilometres (235 mi)
Apogee altitude397 kilometres (247 mi)
Inclination51.6 degrees
Period92.3 min
Docking with ISS
Docking portPMA-2 (Destiny forward)
Docking date25 November 2002, 21:59 UTC
Undocking date2 December 2002, 20:50 UTC
Time docked6 days, 22 hours, 51 minutes

(L-R): Paul S. Lockhart, Michael E. López-Alegría, John B. Herrington, and James D. Wetherbee
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STS-107 →

STS-113 was a Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station (ISS) flown by Space Shuttle Endeavour. During the 14-day mission in late 2002, Endeavour and its crew extended the ISS backbone with the P1 truss and exchanged the Expedition 5 and Expedition 6 crews aboard the station. With commander Jim Wetherbee and pilot Paul Lockhart at the controls, Endeavour docked with the station on 25 November 2002 to begin seven days of station assembly, spacewalks, and crew and equipment transfers. This was the last flight of Endeavour before entering its Orbiter Major Modification period until STS-118 in 2007, which included modernizing the cockpit, and also the final shuttle mission before the Columbia disaster.