Wikipedia:WikiProject Space Missions/Sandbox

This is the sandbox to try different styles for WikiProject Space Missions. Feel free to mess around a little, but please make sure to let us know what you did and why in the summary of changes.


Vostok 1

Vostok 1
Mission Insignia
Mission Statistics
Mission Name:Vostok 1
Call Sign:Кедр (Kedr - "Cedar")
Number of Crew Members:1
Launch:April 12, 1961
06:07 UTC
Baikonur LC1
Landing:April 12, 1961
07:55 UTC
51° N, 46° E
Duration:1 hour, 48 minutes
Number of Orbits:1

Vostok 1 was the first manned space mission. Launched on April 12, 1961, Vostok 1 took Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin into space, the first time anyone had ever journeyed beyond the Earth's atmosphere and the first time anyone went into orbit.

Gagarin orbited the Earth one time in 108 minutes and returned unharmed, ejecting from the Vostok capsule 7 km above the ground and parachuting separately to the ground (the capsule's parachute landing was too rough for cosmonauts to risk it at the time).

The re-entry capsule is now on display at the RKK Energia Museum in Kaluga.

Vostok is Russian for East.

Previous Mission:
Vostok 1 was the first manned space mission.
Vostok Next Mission:
Vostok 2

Apollo 16

Apollo 16
Mission Insignia
File:AP16hennings.JPG
Mission Statistics
Mission Name:Apollo 16
Call Sign:Command module: Caspar
Lunar module: Orion
Number of Crew Members:3
Launch:April 16, 1972
17:54:00 UTC
Kennedy Space Center LC 39A
Lunar Landing:April 21, 1972
02:23:35 UTC
9.0° S 15.5° E Descartes-Cayley
Lunar EVA length:20 hours 14 minutes
Time on Lunar Surface: 2 days 23.0 hours
Landing: April 27, 1972
19:45:05 UTC
0° 43' S, 156° 13' W
Duration:12 days, 13 hours 52 minutes


Apollo 16 was the tenth manned mission in the Apollo program and the fifth mission to land on the moon.

The crew members: John W. Young, commander; Ken Mattingly, command module pilot; and Charles Duke, lunar module pilot. It was a J-class mission, featuring Lunar Rover. It brought back 94.7 kg of lunar samples. It included three lunar EVA: 7.2 hours, 7.4 hours, 5.7 hours and one trans-earth EVA of 1.4. This was the only the second trans-earth EVA ever and was used to bring in film from exterior cameras and open an experiment on microbial survival.





Preceded by :
Apollo 15
Apollo program Followed by :
Apollo 17

Soyuz TMA-2

Soyuz TMA-2
Mission Statistics
Mission Name:Soyuz TMA-2
Number of Crew Members:2
Launch:April 26, 2003 03:53:52 UTC
Baikonur LC1
Contact with ISS:April 28, 2003 05:56:20 UTC
nadir docking port of Zarya/FGB-1 module
Undocking from ISS:October 27, 2003 23:17 UTC
Landing:October 28, 2003 02:41 UTC
49.55° N, 66.57° E, near Arkalyk
Duration:184 days, 21 hours, 47 minutes
Reserve Backup Data
Launch:April 29, 2003 02:43:02 UTC
Baikonur LC1
Contact with ISS:May 1, 2003 04:43 [± 3]m UTC

Soyuz TMA-2 (Russian Союз ТМА-2, Alliance TMA-2) is a Russian spaceflight mission to the International Space Station, the second flight for the TMA modification of the Soyuz spacecraft, and the 6th Soyuz to fly to the ISS.

The commander is Yuri Ivanovich Malenchenko (Russia), and flight engineer Edward Tsang Lu (USA), and after docking with the ISS they exchanged with the resident crew on ISS and became the seventh station crew, called "ISS Expedition Seven". As backup crew Alexander Kaleri and Michael Foale stood by.

Originally the Soyuz missions to the ISS were all planned to be only taxi mission to deliver a new Soyuz spacecraft as the station's lifeboat every six month with a visiting crew, but not for crew exchange. Until the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster the same was planned for Soyuz TMA-2, a visiting crew consisting of commander Gennadi Padalka and ESA-astronaut Pedro Duque were to spend about one week at the station and then return with the previous Soyuz TMA-1 spacecraft. The third seat might have gone to the Chilean Klaus von Storch as a space tourist, but even before the Columbia disaster it looked like his flight would not happen, and the seat would go to the Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov or to deliver freight to the station.

During his stay on the station, Malenchenko became the first person to get married in space. His bride was in Texas where long distance marriages are legal.

The spacecraft returned to Earth on October 28, with both the "Expedition 7" crew as well as Pedro Duque on board. Duque was launched with Soyuz TMA-3 and spend only one week on board of the ISS.


Previous Mission:
Soyuz TMA-1
Soyuz programme Next Mission:
Soyuz TMA-3