Liste der ISS-Expeditionen

Die ISS, fotografiert beim Rundumflug der Space-Shuttle-Mission STS-133

Dies ist die chronologische Liste der ISS-Expeditionen, der Langzeitbesatzungen, auf der Internationalen Raumstation.

Weitere Details finden sich in der Liste der ISS-Kommandanten, der Liste der bemannten ISS-Missionen und der Liste der Raumfahrer auf der ISS. In den letzteren beiden sind auch Kurzzeitbesucher aufgeführt.

Erläuterungen

Der Bezeichnung der jeweiligen ISS-Expedition folgen die Aufzählung der Besatzungsmitglieder. Hinter den Namen der Mitglieder ist in Klammern die Anzahl der damit angetretenen Raumflüge vermerkt. Die daran anschließenden Abkürzungen CDR sowie BI kennzeichnen die Funktionen des ISS-Kommandanten und der Bordingenieure. Die Bezeichnung „Bordingenieur“ ist hier nicht zu verwechseln mit der gleichnamigen Funktion in der Luftfahrt – jeder ISS-Expeditionsteilnehmer, der nicht gerade die Funktion des Kommandanten innehat, wird „Bordingenieur“ genannt.

Die weitere Struktur der Liste wechselt ab Expedition 21/22:

  • Bis Expedition 20 überlappen sich aufeinanderfolgende Expeditionen um jeweils ein bis zwei Wochen. Daher ist der Zeitraum jeder Expedition vollständig mit Beginn, Dauer und Ende angegeben.
  • Alle Expeditionen ab Nr. 21 gehen direkt ineinander über; der Endzeitpunkt einer Expedition ist identisch mit dem Beginn der nächsten. Zur Platzersparnis und besseren Übersicht ist darum ab Expedition 22 nur noch die Dauer und das Ende jeder Expedition angegeben. Außerdem werden die Ankunftszeitpunkte der Raumfahrer – die nicht mehr identisch mit dem Beginn einer Expedition sind – ab Expedition 21 separat genannt.

Alle Datumsangaben beziehen sich auf die koordinierte Weltzeit (UTC).

Die typische Aufenthaltsdauer der Crewmitglieder beträgt jeweils etwa sechs Monate. Die verfügbaren Plätze gehen generell jeweils zur Hälfte an Raumfahrer von NASA und Roskosmos, wobei die NASA Teile ihres Kontingent an die internationalen Partner weitergibt. Wie auch bei anderen Ressourcen auf der ISS gehen 12,8 % an JAXA, 8,3 % an ESA und 2,3 % an CSA.

Bisherige Expeditionen

Expeditionen 1 bis 6

Die Teilnehmer der ersten Expedition erreichten die Station am 2. November 2000 mit dem russischen Sojus-Raumschiff TM-31, das gleichzeitig als Rückkehrfahrzeug für den Notfall diente. Bei den nachfolgenden Expeditionen wurde die Mannschaft während des Besuches eines amerikanischen Space Shuttles ausgetauscht. Der Austausch der Sojus-Kapsel erfolgte durch dreiköpfige Besuchsmissionen. Da die Ablösungsmannschaften jeweils etwa eine Woche vor der geplanten Rückkehr der Vorgängercrews ankamen, überlappten sich die Expeditionen um diesen Zeitraum.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederBeginnDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 1
Expedition 1 insignia.svg
Krikaljow, Shepherd, Gidsenko
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten William Shepherd (4), CDR

RusslandRussland Juri Gidsenko (2), BI
RusslandRussland Sergei Krikaljow (5), BI

2. Nov. 2000
Ankopplung
Sojus TM-31
136,8 Tage19. März 2001
Abkopplung
STS-102
ISS-Expedition 2
Expedition 2 insignia.svg
Voss, Ussatschow, Helms
RusslandRussland Juri Ussatschow (4), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Susan Helms (5), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten James Voss (5), BI

10. März 2001
Ankopplung
STS-102
163,3 Tage20. Aug. 2001
Abkopplung
STS-105
ISS-Expedition 3
ISS Expedition 3 Patch.svg
Tjurin, Culbertson, Deschurow
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Frank Culbertson (3), CDR

RusslandRussland Wladimir Deschurow (2), BI
RusslandRussland Michail Tjurin (1), BI

12. Aug. 2001
Ankopplung
STS-105
124,9 Tage15. Dez. 2001
Abkopplung
STS-108
ISS-Expedition 4
Expedition 4 insignia.svg
Bursch, Onufrijenko, Walz
RusslandRussland Juri Onufrijenko (2), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Daniel Bursch (5), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Carl Walz (4), BI

7. Dez. 2001
Ankopplung
STS-108
189,8 Tage15. Juni 2002
Abkopplung
STS-111
ISS-Expedition 5
Expedition 5 insignia.svg
Korsun, Whitson, Treschtschow
RusslandRussland Waleri Korsun (2), CDR

RusslandRussland Sergei Treschtschow (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Peggy Whitson (1), BI

7. Juni 2002
Ankopplung
STS-111
178,2 Tage2. Dez. 2002
Abkopplung
STS-113
ISS-Expedition 6
Expedition 6 insignia.svg
Pettit, Bowersox, Budarin
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kenneth Bowersox (5), CDR

RusslandRussland Nikolai Budarin (3), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Donald Pettit (1), BI

25. Nov. 2002
Ankopplung
STS-113
159,0 Tage3. Mai 2003
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-1

Expeditionen 7 bis 12

Das Space Shuttle Columbia stürzte am 1. Februar 2003 ab. Daraufhin wurden weitere Flüge der Space-Shuttle-Flotte bis Juli 2005 abgesagt. Ab Expedition 7 wurde die Besatzung daher mittels der Sojus-Kapseln ausgetauscht. Um die Versorgung auch ohne Shuttle-Flüge zu gewährleisten, wurde die Mannschaftsstärke der Expeditionen von drei auf zwei Mitglieder reduziert.

Die Expeditionen begannen jeweils mit dem Ankoppeln des Zubringerraumschiffs und endeten mit dessen Abkopplung für den Rückflug. Da die Ablösungsmannschaft jeweils etwa eine Woche vor der geplanten Rückkehr der Vorgängercrew ankam, überlappten sich die Expeditionen um diesen Zeitraum.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederBeginnDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 7
Expedition 7 insignia.svg
Malentschenko, Lu
RusslandRussland Juri Malentschenko (3), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Edward Lu (3), BI

28. Apr. 2003
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-2
182,7 Tage27. Okt. 2003
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-2
ISS-Expedition 8
Expedition 8 insignia.svg
Kaleri, Foale
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael Foale (6), CDR

RusslandRussland Alexander Kaleri (4), BI

20. Okt. 2003
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-3
192,6 Tage29. Apr. 2004
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-3
ISS-Expedition 9
Expedition 9 insignia.svg
Fincke, Padalka
RusslandRussland Gennadi Padalka (2), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Edward Fincke (1), BI

21. Apr. 2004
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-4
185,7 Tage23. Okt. 2004
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-4
ISS-Expedition 10
ISS Expedition 10 Patch.svg
Chiao, Scharipow
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Leroy Chiao (4), CDR

RusslandRussland Salischan Scharipow (2), BI

16. Okt. 2004
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-5
190,6 Tage24. Apr. 2005
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-5
ISS-Expedition 11
Expedition 11 insignia.svg
Krikaljow, Phillips
RusslandRussland Sergei Krikaljow (6), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten John Phillips (2), BI

17. Apr. 2005
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-6
176,8 Tage10. Okt. 2005
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-6
ISS-Expedition 12
ISS Expedition 12 Patch.svg
McArthur, Tokarew
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten William S. McArthur (4), CDR

RusslandRussland Waleri Tokarew (2), BI

3. Okt. 2005
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-7
187,6 Tage8. Apr. 2006
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-7

Expeditionen 13 bis 19

Am 26. Juli 2005 startete mit der Discovery seit dem Absturz der Columbia erstmals wieder ein Space Shuttle. Fast ein Jahr später brachte die Discovery am 4. Juli 2006 den ESA-Astronauten Thomas Reiter zur ISS, womit die Stammbesatzung wieder auf drei Mitglieder erhöht wurde. Der Austausch des Kommandanten und des ersten Bordingenieurs erfolgte weiterhin mit den Sojus-Raumschiffen, während der zweite Bordingenieur bei den jetzt wieder regelmäßig startenden Shuttle-Missionen ausgetauscht wurde.

Die Expeditionszeiträume entsprachen weiterhin den Anwesenheitszeiträumen der Sojus-Besatzungen, während die Shuttle-Astronauten jeweils zu Zwischenterminen ankamen und teils an zwei Expeditionen teilnahmen. (Die Daten der Expeditionen sind nachfolgend weiter in schwarzer Schrift dargestellt, die davon unabhängigen Daten der Shuttle-Flüge in grau.)

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederBeginnDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 13
ISS Expedition 13 Patch.svg
Winogradow, Williams
RusslandRussland Pawel Winogradow (2), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jeffrey Williams (2), BI

1. Apr. 2006
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-8
180,7 Tage28. Sep. 2006
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-8
ISS Expedition 13 Patch with Reiter.svg
Reiter, Winogradow, Williams
Deutschland Thomas Reiter (2), BI
6. Juli 2006
Ankopplung
STS-121
166,3 Tage19. Dez. 2006
Abkopplung
STS-116
ISS-Expedition 14
ISS Expedition 14 Patch.svg
Reiter, Lopez-Alegria, Tjurin
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael López-Alegría (4), CDR

RusslandRussland Michail Tjurin (2), BI

20. Sep. 2006
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-9
213,2 Tage21. Apr. 2007
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-9
Williams, Lopez-Alegria, Tjurin
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Sunita Williams (1), BI
11. Dez. 2006
Ankopplung
STS-116
189,7 Tage19. Juni 2007
Abkopplung
STS-117
ISS-Expedition 15
ISS Expedition 15 Patch.svg
Williams, Jurtschichin, Kotow
RusslandRussland Fjodor Jurtschichin (2), CDR

RusslandRussland Oleg Kotow (1), BI

9. Apr. 2007
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-10
194,5 Tage21. Okt. 2007
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-10
Anderson, Jurtschichin, Kotow
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Clayton Anderson (1), BI
10. Juni 2007
Ankopplung
STS-117
147,6 Tage5. Nov. 2007
Abkopplung
STS-120
ISS-Expedition 16
ISS Expedition 16 Patch.svg
Anderson, Malentschenko, Tani, Eyharts, Whitson, Reisman
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Peggy Whitson (2), CDR

RusslandRussland Juri Malentschenko (4), BI

12. Okt. 2007
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-11
189,6 Tage19. Apr. 2008
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-11
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Daniel Tani (2), BI25. Okt. 2007
Ankopplung
STS-120
115,9 Tage18. Feb. 2008
Abkopplung
STS-122
FrankreichFrankreich Léopold Eyharts (2), BI9. Feb. 2008
Ankopplung
STS-122
044,3 Tage25. März 2008
Abkopplung
STS-123
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Garrett Reisman (1), BI13. März 2008
Ankopplung
STS-123
090,3 Tage11. Juni 2008
Abkopplung
STS-124
ISS-Expedition 17
ISS Expedition 17 Patch.svg
Chamitoff, Reisman, Wolkow, Kononenko
RusslandRussland Sergei Wolkow (1), CDR

RusslandRussland Oleg Kononenko (1), BI

10. Apr. 2008
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-12

196,5 Tage
24. Okt. 2008
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-12
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Gregory Chamitoff (1), BI2. Juni 2008
Ankopplung
STS-124
178,9 Tage28. Nov. 2008
Abkopplung
STS-126
ISS-Expedition 18
ISS Expedition 18 Patch.svg
Wakata, Fincke, Magnus, Lontschakow, Chamitoff
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Edward Fincke (2), CDR

RusslandRussland Juri Lontschakow (3), BI

14. Okt. 2008
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-13
175,8 Tage8. Apr. 2009
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-13
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Sandra Magnus (2), BI16. Nov. 2008
Ankopplung
STS-126
128,9 Tage25. März 2009
Abkopplung
STS-119
JapanJapan Kōichi Wakata (3), BI17. März 2009
Ankopplung
STS-119
132,8 Tage28. Juli 2009
Abkopplung
STS-127
ISS-Expedition 19
ISS Expedition 19 Patch.svg
Barratt, Padalka, Wakata
RusslandRussland Gennadi Padalka (3), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael Barratt (1), BI

28. März 2009
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-14
062,0 Tage29. Mai 2009
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-15

Expeditionen 20 und 21

Seit Mai 2009 besteht die ISS-Besatzung im Normalfall aus sechs Personen. Entsprechend sind auch ständig zwei Sojus-Kapseln als Rückkehr-Fahrzeuge angekoppelt. Alle zwei oder vier Monate werden drei Besatzungsmitglieder ausgetauscht. Das Kommando geht dann auf einen der verbleibenden Raumfahrer über und die Nummerierung wechselt. Jedes Besatzungsmitglied gehört also zu zwei Expeditionen. Die Besatzung wird zum großen Teil mit Sojus-Raumschiffen transportiert, ein Teil wird aber weiterhin bei Shuttle-Missionen ausgetauscht.

Ab der Expedition 20 überlappen sich somit die Expeditionszeiträume nicht mehr; stattdessen markiert jeweils die Abkopplung eines Sojus-Raumschiffs den Übergang zur nächsten Expedition. Die Expedition 20 begann letztmals mit der Ankopplung einer Sojus-Kapsel. (Die Ankunftsdaten der Raumfahrer sind daher ab Expedition 21 separat angegeben; aus den Expeditionszeiträumen sind sie nicht mehr ablesbar.)

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederBeginnDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 20RusslandRussland Gennadi Padalka (3), CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael Barratt (1), BI

JapanJapan Kōichi Wakata (3), BI
ISS Expedition 20 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: vorne: De Winne, Padalka, Romanenko, hinten: Thirsk, Barratt, Stott, Kopra, WakataBelgien Frank De Winne (2), BI, 21 CDR

RusslandRussland Roman Romanenko (1), BI
Kanada Robert Thirsk (2), BI

29. Mai 2009
Ankopplung
Sojus TMA-15
134,5 Tage11. Okt. 2009
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-14
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Timothy Kopra (1), BI17. Juli 2009
Ankopplung
STS-127
053,1 Tage8. Sep. 2009
Abkopplung
STS-128
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Nicole Stott (1), BI31. Aug. 2009
Ankopplung
STS-128
086,4 Tage25. Nov. 2009
Abkopplung
STS-129
ISS-Expedition 21
ISS Expedition 21 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Maxim Surajew, Nicole Stott, Jeffrey Williams, Frank De Winne (Kommandant), Robert Thirsk, Roman Romanenko
Ankunft 2. Okt. 2009 mit Sojus TMA-16

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jeffrey Williams (3), BI
RusslandRussland Maxim Surajew (1), BI

11. Okt. 2009
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-14
051,1 Tage1. Dez. 2009
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-15

Expeditionen 22 bis 42

Durch das Ende des Space-Shuttle-Programms 2011 erfolgt der Austausch der Langzeitbesatzungen bis auf Weiteres ausschließlich über die russischen Sojus-Raumschiffe.

Seit Nr. 21 beginnen die Expeditionen nicht mehr mit der Ankunft neuer Raumfahrer, sondern mit dem Ende der jeweils vorausgehenden Expedition. Die Ankunftszeiten der Teilnehmer sind daher nicht mehr aus den Expeditionsdaten ersichtlich und werden in der Liste separat genannt. Die Aufenthaltsdauer der Raumfahrer kann aus den Sojus-Artikeln oder der Liste der bemannten Missionen zur Internationalen Raumstation entnommen werden; sie stimmt nicht mehr mit der Dauer der Expeditionen überein.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 22Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jeffrey Williams (3), CDR

RusslandRussland Maxim Surajew (1), BI

ISS Expedition 22 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: T.J. Creamer, Jeffrey Williams (Kommandant), Maxim Surajew, Oleg Kotow, Sōichi Noguchi
ab 22. Dez. 2009 – Sojus TMA-17

RusslandRussland Oleg Kotow (2), BI, 23 CDR
JapanJapan Sōichi Noguchi (2), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Timothy Creamer (1), BI

107,2 Tage18. März 2010
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-16
ISS-Expedition 23
ISS Expedition 23 Patch v2.svg
v. l. n. r.: Michail Kornijenko, Tracy Caldwell-Dyson, Alexander Skworzow, Oleg Kotow (Kommandant), T.J. Creamer und Sōichi Noguchi
ab 4. April 2010 – Sojus TMA-18

RusslandRussland Alexander Skworzow (1), BI, 24 CDR
RusslandRussland Michail Kornijenko (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Tracy Caldwell-Dyson (2), BI

075,7 Tage2. Juni 2010
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-17
ISS-Expedition 24
ISS Expedition 24 Patch.svgv. l. n. r. vorn: Alexander Skworzow (Kommandant) und Shannon Walker, hinten: Doug Wheelock, Tracy Caldwell-Dyson, Michail Kornijenko, Fjodor Jurtschichin
ab 17. Juni 2010 – Sojus TMA-19

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Douglas Wheelock (2), BI, 25 CDR
RusslandRussland Fjodor Jurtschichin (3), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Shannon Walker (1), BI

115,1 Tage25. Sep. 2010
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-18
ISS-Expedition 25
ISS Expedition 25 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Skripotschka, Alexander Kaleri, Scott J. Kelly, Douglas Wheelock (Kommandant), Shannon Walker, Fjodor Jurtschichin
ab 10. Okt. 2010 – Sojus TMA-01M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Scott Kelly (3), BI, 26 CDR
RusslandRussland Oleg Skripotschka (1), BI
RusslandRussland Alexander Kaleri (5), BI

062,0 Tage26. Nov. 2010
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-19
ISS-Expedition 26
ISS Expedition 26 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Skripotschka, Alexander Kaleri, Dmitri Kondratjew, Paolo Nespoli, Catherine Coleman und Scott Kelly (Kommandant)
ab 17. Dez. 2010 – Sojus TMA-20

RusslandRussland Dmitri Kondratjew (1), BI, 27 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Catherine Coleman (3), BI
ItalienItalien Paolo Nespoli (2), BI

110,1 Tage16. März 2011
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-01M
ISS-Expedition 27
ISS Expedition 27 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Ronald Garan, Paolo Nespoli, Alexander Samokutajew, Catherine Coleman, Andrei Borissenko und Dmitri Kondratjew (Kommandant)
ab 6. April 2011 – Sojus TMA-21

RusslandRussland Andrei Borissenko (1), BI, 28 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexander Samokutajew (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Ronald Garan (2), BI

068,7 Tage23. Mai 2011
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-20
ISS-Expedition 28
ISS Expedition 28 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Satoshi Furukawa, Mike Fossum, Ron Garan, Alexander Samokutajew, Sergei Wolkow und Andrei Borissenko (Kommandant)
ab 9. Juni 2011 – Sojus TMA-02M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Mike Fossum (3), BI, 29 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Wolkow (2), BI
JapanJapan Satoshi Furukawa (1), BI

115,1 Tage17. Sep. 2011
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-21
ISS-Expedition 29
ISS Expedition 29 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Satoshi Furukawa, Mike Fossum (Kommandant), Sergei Wolkow, Anatoli Iwanischin, Daniel Burbank und Anton Schkaplerow
ab 16. Nov. 2011 – Sojus TMA-22

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Dan Burbank (3), BI, 30 CDR
RusslandRussland Anton Schkaplerow (1), BI
RusslandRussland Anatoli Iwanischin (1), BI[1]

066,9 Tage21. Nov. 2011
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-02M
ISS-Expedition 30
ISS Expedition 30 Patch.pngv. l. n. r.: Anton Schkaplerow, Daniel Burbank, Anatoli Iwanischin, André Kuipers, Oleg Kononenko und Donald Pettit
ab 23. Dez. 2011 – Sojus TMA-03M

RusslandRussland Oleg Kononenko (2), BI, 31 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Don Pettit (3), BI
NiederlandeNiederlande André Kuipers (2), BI

157,4 Tage27. Apr. 2012
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-22
ISS-Expedition 31
ISS Expedition 31 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Joseph Acaba, Gennadi Padalka, Sergei Rewin, André Kuipers, Oleg Kononenko und Donald Pettit
ab 17. Mai 2012 – Sojus TMA-04M

RusslandRussland Gennadi Padalka (4), BI, 32 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Rewin (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Joseph Acaba (2), BI

064,9 Tage1. Juli 2012
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-03M
ISS-Expedition 32
ISS Expedition 32 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: Akihiko Hoshide, Juri Malentschenko, Sunita Williams, Joseph Acaba, Gennadi Padalka und Sergei Rewin
ab 17. Juli 2012 – Sojus TMA-05M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Sunita Williams (2), BI, 33 CDR
RusslandRussland Juri Malentschenko (5), BI
JapanJapan Akihiko Hoshide (2), BI

077,8 Tage16. Sep. 2012
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-04M
ISS-Expedition 33
ISS Expedition 33 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Sunita Williams, Juri Malentschenko, Akihiko Hoshide, Jewgeni Tarelkin, Oleg Nowizki und Kevin Ford
ab 25. Okt. 2012 – Sojus TMA-06M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kevin Ford (2), BI, 34 CDR
RusslandRussland Oleg Nowizki (1), BI
RusslandRussland Jewgeni Tarelkin (1), BI

063,0 Tage18. Nov. 2012
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-05M
ISS-Expedition 34
ISS Expedition 34 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: Oleg Nowizki, Kevin Ford, Jewgeni Tarelkin, Roman Romanenko, Chris Hadfield und Thomas Marshburn
ab 21. Dez. 2012 – Sojus TMA-07M

Kanada Chris Hadfield (3), BI, 35 CDR
RusslandRussland Roman Romanenko (2), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Thomas Marshburn (2), BI

117,1 Tage15. März 2013
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-06M
ISS-Expedition 35
ISS Expedition 35 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Alexander Missurkin, Pawel Winogradow, Christopher Cassidy, Roman Romanenko, Chris Hadfield und Thomas Marshburn
ab 29. März 2013 – Sojus TMA-08M

RusslandRussland Pawel Winogradow (3), BI, 36 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexander Missurkin (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Christopher Cassidy (2), BI

059,0 Tage13. Mai 2013
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-07M
ISS-Expedition 36
ISS Expedition 36 Patch.pngv. l. n. r.: Alexander Missurkin, Pawel Winogradow, Christopher Cassidy, Luca Parmitano, Fjodor Jurtschichin und Karen Nyberg
ab 29. Mai 2013 – Sojus TMA-09M

RusslandRussland Fjodor Jurtschichin (4), BI, 37 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Karen Nyberg (2), BI
ItalienItalien Luca Parmitano (1), BI

120,0 Tage10. Sep. 2013
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-08M
ISS-Expedition 37
ISS Expedition 37 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Karen Nyberg, Fjodor Jurtschichin, Luca Parmitano, Michael Hopkins, Oleg Kotow und Sergei Rjazanski
ab 26. Sep. 2013 – Sojus TMA-10M

RusslandRussland Oleg Kotow (3), BI, 38 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Rjasanski (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael Hopkins (1), BI

061,0 Tage10. Nov. 2013
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-09M
ISS-Expedition 38
ab 7. Nov. 2013 – Sojus TMA-11M

JapanJapan Kōichi Wakata (4), BI, 39 CDR
RusslandRussland Michail Tjurin, (3), BI[2]
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Richard Mastracchio (4), BI

ISS Expedition 38 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: Michail Tjurin, Kōichi Wakata, Richard Mastracchio, Sergei Rjazanski, Oleg Kotow und Michael Hopkins120,0 Tage11. März 2014
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-10M
ISS-Expedition 39
ISS Expedition 39 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Artemjew, Steven Swanson, Alexander Skworzow, Michail Tjurin, Kōichi Wakata und Richard Mastracchio
ab 27. März 2014 – Sojus TMA-12M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Steven Swanson (3), BI, 40 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexander Skworzow (2), BI
RusslandRussland Oleg Artemjew (1), BI

063,9 Tage13. Mai 2014
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-11M
ISS-Expedition 40
ISS Expedition 40 Patch.pngv. l. n. r.: Alexander Skworzow, Steven Swanson, Oleg Artemjew, Alexander Gerst, Maxim Surajew und Reid Wiseman
ab 29. Mai 2014 – Sojus TMA-13M

RusslandRussland Maxim Surajew (2), BI, 41 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Gregory Wiseman (1), BI
Deutschland Alexander Gerst (1), BI

120,0 Tage10. Sep. 2014
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-12M
ISS-Expedition 41
ISS Expedition 41 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Reid Wiseman, Alexander Gerst, Maxim Surajew, Barry Wilmore, Alexander Samokutjajew und Jelena Serowa
ab 26. Sep. 2014 – Sojus TMA-14M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Barry Wilmore (2), BI, 42 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexander Samokutjajew (2), BI
RusslandRussland Jelena Serowa (1), BI

060,1 Tage10. Nov. 2014
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-13M
ISS-Expedition 42
ISS Expedition 42 Patch.svgv. l. n. r.: Jelena Serowa, Barry Wilmore, Alexander Samokutjajew, Anton Schkaplerow, Terry Virts und Samantha Cristoforetti
ab 24. Nov. 2014 – Sojus TMA-15M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Terry Virts (2), BI
RusslandRussland Anton Schkaplerow (2), BI
ItalienItalien Samantha Cristoforetti (1), BI

121,9 Tage11. März 2015
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-14M

Expeditionen 43 bis 46 (mit Jahresmission)

Als einmaliges Experiment im Rahmen der NASA Twins Study wurde die Einsatzzeit von Michail Kornijenko und Scott Kelly von sechs auf zwölf Monate verlängert. Dadurch wurden zwei Plätze für Kurzzeitaufenthalte frei, die von dem Dänen Andreas Mogensen und dem Kasachen Aidyn Aimbetow besetzt wurden.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 43Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Terry Virts (2), CDR

RusslandRussland Anton Schkaplerow (2), BI
ItalienItalien Samantha Cristoforetti (1), BI

ISS Expedition 43 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Gennadi Padalka, Scott Kelly, Anton Schkaplerow, Samantha Cristoforetti, Michail Kornijenko und Terry Virts
ab 28. März 2015 – Sojus TMA-16M
091,4 Tage11. Juni 2015
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-15M

RusslandRussland Gennadi Padalka (5), BI, 44 CDR

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Scott Kelly (4), BI, 45 und 46 CDR
RusslandRussland Michail Kornijenko (2), BI

340 Tage – längster ISS-Aufenthalt

ISS-Expedition 44
ISS Expedition 44 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Kjell Lindgren, Oleg Kononenko, Kimiya Yui, Scott Kelly, Gennadi Padalka und Michail Kornijenko
ab 23. Juli 2015 – Sojus TMA-17M

RusslandRussland Oleg Kononenko (3), BI
JapanJapan Kimiya Yui (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kjell Lindgren (1), BI

090,5 Tage11. Sep. 2015
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-16M
ISS-Expedition 45
ab 4. Sept. 2015 – Sojus TMA-18M



RusslandRussland Sergei Wolkow (3), BI

ISS Expedition 45 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Scott Kelly, Sergei Wolkow, Michail Kornijenko, Kjell Lindgren, Oleg Kononenko und Kimiya Yui
091,5 Tage11. Dez. 2015
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-17M
ISS-Expedition 46
ISS Expedition 46 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Scott Kelly, Sergei Wolkow, Michail Kornijenko, Timothy Kopra, Timothy Peake und Juri Malentschenko
ab 15. Dez. 2015 – Sojus TMA-19M

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte StaatenTimothy Kopra (2), BI
Vereinigtes KonigreichVereinigtes Königreich Timothy Peake (1), BI
RusslandRussland Juri Malentschenko (6), BI

081,6 Tage2. März 2016
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-18M
 

Expeditionen 47 bis 58

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 47

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Timothy Kopra (2), CDR
Vereinigtes KonigreichVereinigtes Königreich Timothy Peake (1), BI
RusslandRussland Juri Malentschenko (6), BI

ISS Expedition 47 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Skripotschka, Jeffrey Williams, Alexei Owtschinin, Timothy Peake, Timothy Kopra und Juri Malentschenko
ab 19. März 2016 – Sojus TMA-20

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jeffrey Williams (4), BI, 48 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexei Owtschinin (1), BI
RusslandRussland Oleg Skripotschka (2), BI

108,4 Tage18. Juni 2016
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-19M
ISS-Expedition 48
ISS Expedition 48 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Skripotschka, Jeffrey Williams, Alexei Owtschinin, Takuya Ōnishi, Anatoli Iwanischin und Kathleen Rubins
ab 9. Juli 2016 – Sojus MS-01

RusslandRussland Anatoli Iwanischin (2), BI, 49 CDR
JapanJapan Takuya Ōnishi (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kathleen Rubins (1), BI

080,7 Tage6. Sep. 2016
Abkopplung
Sojus TMA-20M
ISS-Expedition 49
ISS Expedition 49 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Sergei Ryschikow, Robert Kimbrough, Andrei Borissenko, Kathleen Rubins, Anatoli Iwanischin und Takuya Ōnishi
ab 21. Okt. 2016 – Sojus MS-02

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Shane Kimbrough (2), BI, 50 CDR
RusslandRussland Andrei Borissenko (2), BI
RusslandRussland Sergei Ryschikow (1), BI

053,1 Tage30. Okt. 2016
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-01
ISS-Expedition 50
ISS Expedition 50 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Andrei Borissenko, Robert Kimbrough, Sergei Ryschikow, Thomas Pesquet, Peggy Whitson und Oleg Nowizki
ab 19. Nov. 2016 – Sojus MS-03

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Peggy Whitson (3), BI, 51 CDR
RusslandRussland Oleg Nowizki (2), BI
FrankreichFrankreich Thomas Pesquet (1), BI

162,3 Tage10. Apr. 2017
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-02
ISS-Expedition 51
ISS Expedition 51 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Jack Fischer, Fjodor Jurtschichin, Thomas Pesquet, Peggy Whitson und Oleg Nowizki
ab 20. April 2017 – Sojus MS-04

RusslandRussland Fjodor Jurtschichin (5), BI, 52 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jack Fischer (1), BI

053,1 Tage2. Juni 2017
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-03
ohne Whitson
ISS-Expedition 52Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Peggy Whitson (3), BI

ab 28. Juli 2017 – Sojus MS-05

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Randolph Bresnik (2), BI, 53 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Rjasanski (2), BI
ItalienItalien Paolo Nespoli (3), BI

ISS Expedition 52 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Jack Fischer, Fjodor Jurtschichin, Peggy Whitson, Paolo Nespoli, Randolph Bresnik und Sergei Rjasanski
092,4 Tage2. Sep. 2017
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-04
mit Whitson
ISS-Expedition 53
ISS Expedition 53 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Joseph Acaba, Alexander Missurkin, Mark Vande Hei, Sergei Rjasanski, Randolph Bresnik und Paolo Nespoli
ab 13. Sep. 2017 – Sojus MS-06

RusslandRussland Alexander Missurkin (2), BI, 54 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Mark Vande Hei (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Joseph Acaba (3), BI

102,3 Tage14. Dez. 2017
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-05
ISS-Expedition 54
ISS Expedition 54 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Joseph Acaba, Mark Vande Hei, Alexander Missurkin, Anton Schkaplerow, Scott Tingle und Norishige Kanai
ab 19. Dez. 2017 – Sojus MS-07

RusslandRussland Anton Schkaplerow (3), BI, 55 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Scott Tingle (1), BI
JapanJapan Norishige Kanai (1), BI

75,4 Tage27. Feb. 2018
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-06
ISS-Expedition 55
ISS Expedition 55 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: sitzend: Scott Tingle, Anton Schkaplerow und Norishige Kanai hinten stehend: Richard Arnold, Andrew Feustel und Oleg Artemjew
ab 23. März 2018 – Sojus MS-08

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Andrew Feustel (3), BI, 56 CDR
RusslandRussland Oleg Artemjew (2), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Richard Arnold (2), BI

095,4 Tage3. Juni 2018
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-07
ISS-Expedition 56
ISS Expedition 56 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Oleg Artemjew, Andrew Feustel, Richard Arnold, Sergei Prokopjew, Alexander Gerst und Serena Auñón-Chancellor
ab 8. Juni 2018 – Sojus MS-09

Deutschland Alexander Gerst (2), BI, 57 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Prokopjew (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Serena Auñón-Chancellor (1), BI

122,9 Tage4. Okt. 2018
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-08
ISS-Expedition 57
ISS Expedition 57 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Serena Auñón-Chancellor, Alexei Owtschinin, Alexander Gerst, Nick Hague und Sergei Prokopjew
Die ursprünglich geplante Mannschaft
ab 11. Okt. 2018 – Sojus MS-10

RusslandRussland Alexei Owtschinin (2), BI, 58 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Nick Hague (1), BI


ab 3. Dez. 2018 – Sojus MS-11

RusslandRussland Oleg Kononenko (4), BI, 58 CDR
Kanada David Saint-Jacques (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Anne McClain (1), BI

076,7 Tage20. Dez. 2018
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-09
ISS-Expedition 58
ISS Expedition 58 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Anne McClain, Oleg Kononenko und David Saint-Jacques
084,4 Tage15. März 2019
Ankopplung
Sojus MS-12

Der Start des Raumschiffs Sojus MS-10 am 11. Oktober 2018 musste wegen eines Problems bei der ersten Stufentrennung abgebrochen werden; Alexei Owtschinin und Nick Hague landeten unversehrt in Kasachstan. Als Ersatz für die Mannschaft der Expedition 57 diente die Crew des vorgezogenen Flugs Sojus MS-11, deren Aufenthaltsdauer sich auf drei Expeditionen verlängerte.

Expeditionen 59 bis 62

Durch Verzögerungen bei der Fertigstellung der beiden neuen US-Raumschiffe Crew Dragon und CST-100 Starliner ergaben sich einige Änderungen in der Mannschaftsplanung. Der Aufenthaltszeitraum von Christina Hammock Koch und Andrew Morgan wurde vorsorglich auf drei Expeditionen verlängert, damit das amerikanische Segment der Raumstation in jeden Fall mit mindestens einem Astronauten besetzt bleiben konnte.[3][4] Später erwarb die NASA auch je einen Sitz für einen (weiteren) US-Astronauten auf den Flügen Sojus MS-12 bis Sojus MS-17.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 59

RusslandRussland Oleg Kononenko (4), CDR
Kanada David Saint-Jacques (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Anne McClain (1), BI

ISS Expedition 59 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: David Saint-Jacques, Anne McClain, Oleg Kononenko, Alexei Owtschinin, Nick Hague und Christina Hammock Koch
ab 15. März 2019 – Sojus MS-12
101,9 Tage24. Juni 2019
Abkopplung Sojus MS-11

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Christina Hammock Koch (1), BI

328 Tage – längster Weltraum­aufenthalt einer Frau

RusslandRussland Alexei Owtschinin (4), BI, 60 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Nick Hague (1), BI

ISS-Expedition 60
ISS Expedition 60 Patch.svg
v. l. i. Uzs.: Hammock Koch, Owtschinin, Hague, Parmitano, Skworzow und Morgan
ab 20. Juli 2019 – Sojus MS-13
0100,3 Tage3. Okt. 2019
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-12

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Andrew Morgan (1), BI

ItalienItalien Luca Parmitano (2), BI, 61 CDR
RusslandRussland Alexander Skworzow (3), BI

ISS-Expedition 61
ab 25. Sep. 2019 – Sojus MS-15


RusslandRussland Oleg Skripotschka (3), BI, 62 CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jessica Meir (1), BI

ISS Expedition 61 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Andrew Morgan, Alexander Skworzow, Luca Parmitano, Oleg Skripotschka, Jessica Meir und Christina Hammock Koch
,0125,9 Tage6. Feb. 2020
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-13
ISS-Expedition 62
ISS Expedition 62 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Andrew Morgan, Chris Cassidy, Anatoli Iwanschin, Oleg Skripotschka, Jessica Meir und Iwan Wagner
ab 9. April 2020 – Sojus MS-16

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Chris Cassidy (3), BI
RusslandRussland Anatoli Iwanischin (3), BI
RusslandRussland Iwan Wagner (1), BI

70,8 Tage17. Apr. 2020
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-15
mit Morgan

Aktuelle und zukünftige Expeditionen

Seit der Expedition 63 beträgt die Dauer wieder ungefähr ein halbes Jahr. Der Wechsel findet im Frühling und im Herbst statt.

Ab Expedition 63

Die aktuelle Expedition 69 begann am 28. März 2023 mit dem Abkoppeln des Raumschiffs Sojus MS-22 von der ISS und wird voraussichtlich im September 2023 mit dem Abkoppeln von Sojus MS-23 enden.

EmblemMannschaftsfotoMitgliederDauerEnde
ISS-Expedition 63

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Chris Cassidy (3), CDR
RusslandRussland Anatoli Iwanischin (3), BI
RusslandRussland Iwan Wagner (1), BI

ISS Expedition 63 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Chris Cassidy, Anatoli Iwanischin und Iwan Wagner
31. Mai bis 1. August 2020 – SpaceX Demo-2

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Douglas Hurley (3), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Robert Behnken (3), BI

187,9 Tage21. Okt. 2020
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-16
ISS-Expedition 64
14. Oktober 2020 bis 17. April 2021 – Sojus MS-17

RusslandRussland Sergei Ryschikow (2), 64 CDR
RusslandRussland Sergei Kud-Swertschkow (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kathleen Rubins (2), BI

ISS Expedition 64 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Kate Rubins, Victor Glover, Sōichi Noguchi, Sergei Ryschikow (Kommandant), Michael Hopkins, Shannon Walker und Sergei Kud-Swertschkow
9. April 2021 – Sojus MS-18
17. November 2020 bis 2. Mai 2021 – SpaceX Crew-1

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Michael Hopkins (2), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Victor Glover (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Shannon Walker (2), BI, 65 CDR
JapanJapan Sōichi Noguchi (3), BI

177,1 Tage17. Apr. 2021
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-17
ISS-Expedition 65RusslandRussland Oleg Nowizki (3), BI
bis 17. Oktober 2021 – Sojus MS-18

RusslandRussland Pjotr Dubrow (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Mark Vande Hei (2), BI

ISS Expedition 65 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Pjotr Dubrow, Shane Kimbrough, Megan McArthur, Thomas Pesquet, Aki Hoshide, Oleg Nowizki und Mark Vande Hei
24. April bis 8. November 2021 – SpaceX Crew-2

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Robert Kimbrough (3), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Katherine McArthur (2), BI
JapanJapan Akihiko Hoshide (3), CDR, BI
FrankreichFrankreich Thomas Pesquet (2), BI, CDR[5]

183 Tage17. Okt. 2021
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-18
ISS-Expedition 66
5. Oktober 2021 Sojus MS-19[6]

RusslandRussland Anton Schkaplerow (4)[7]

ISS Expedition 66 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Raja Chari, Thomas Marshburn, Matthias Maurer, Anton Schkaplerow, Pjotr Dubrow, Kayla Barron, Mark Vande Hei
18. März bis 29. September 2022 – Sojus MS-21

RusslandRussland Oleg Artemjew (3), CDR
RusslandRussland Denis Matwejew (1), BI
RusslandRussland Sergei Wladimirowitsch Korsakow (1), BI

12. November 2021 bis 5. Mai 2022 – SpaceX Crew-3

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Thomas Marshburn (3), CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Raja Chari (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kayla Barron (1), BI
Deutschland Matthias Maurer (1), BI

164 Tage30. März 2022
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-19
bis 30. März 2022 Sojus MS-19[8]
ISS-Expedition 67
ISS Expedition 67 Patch.png
v. l. n. r.: Robert Hines, Samantha Cristoforetti, Denis Matveev, Oleg Artemyev, Sergey Korsakov, Jessica Watkins, Kjell Lindgren
27. April bis 14. Oktober 2022 – SpaceX Crew-4

ItalienItalien Samantha Cristoforetti (2), BI, CDR
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Kjell Lindgren (2), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Robert Hines (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Jessica Watkins (1), BI

183 Tage29. Sep. 2022
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-21
ISS-Expedition 68
ISS Expedition 68 Patch.svg
v. l. n. r.: Frank Rubio, Dmitri Petelin, Koichi Wakata, Josh Cassada, Nicole Mann, Sergey Prokopyev, Anna Kikina.
5. Oktober 2022 bis 12. März 2023 – SpaceX Crew-5

Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Nicole Mann (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Josh A. Cassada (1), BI
JapanJapan Kōichi Wakata (5), MS
RusslandRussland Anna Jurjewna Kikina (1), MS

21. September 2022 bis 27. September 2023 (geplant) – Sojus MS-22 / Sojus MS-23

RusslandRussland Sergei Walerjewitsch Prokopjew (2), BI, CDR
RusslandRussland Dmitri Alexandrowitsch Petelin (1), BI
Vereinigte StaatenVereinigte Staaten Francisco Rubio (1), BI

371 Tage
(geplant)
27. Sep. 2023
Abkopplung
Sojus MS-23
(geplant)

Weblinks

Einzelnachweise

  1. Mike Suffredini: International Space Station Program Status, 13. September 2010 (PDF; 2,91 MB, englisch)
  2. Планируемые полёты. astronaut.ru, 18. März 2011, abgerufen am 19. März 2011 (russisch).
  3. Jeff Foust: Two NASA astronauts to get extended ISS stays. In: Spacenews. 17. April 2019, abgerufen am 17. April 2019.
  4. US to Extend Use of Russia's Soyuz for ISS Missions Until April 2020 - Source. In: Sputnik News. 12. Februar 2019, abgerufen am 9. März 2019.
  5. Le Normand Thomas Pesquet deviendra le premier français à commander l’ISS. Paris Normandie, 16. März 2021.
  6. Anatoly Zak: Russian space program in 2021, abgerufen am 10. März 2021.
  7. Россия не исключила отправку двух «туристов» для съемок фильма на МКС. RBC, 16. November 2020 (russisch).
  8. NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei, Russian cosmonauts return safely to Earth. The Washington Post, 30. März 2022, abgerufen am 9. Juli 2022 (englisch).

Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien

Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg
Flag of Canada introduced in 1965, using Pantone colors. This design replaced the Canadian Red Ensign design.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg
Flagge des Vereinigten Königreichs in der Proportion 3:5, ausschließlich an Land verwendet. Auf See beträgt das richtige Verhältnis 1:2.
Flag of the United Kingdom (1-2).svg
Union Jack, Flagge des Vereinigten Königreichs
ISS Expedition 51 Patch.svg
Official crew patch of Expedition 51 during their mission to the International Space.
  • From as early as the 11th century, coats of arms have been used as emblems representing groups as small as families to as large as countries. The Expedition 51 patch is designed as a modernized international coat of arms, blending the traditional shield shape with our modernized symbol of achievement, the International Space Station. The background represents our home world and its inhabitants on the left, and outer space to the right. The bi-color International Space Station is the bridge between the two, symbolizing the benefits on Earth of space research, and at the same time our mission to explore deeper into space, on a path to further discovery and knowledge.
Expedition 51 crew portrait.jpg
The five-member Expedition 51 crew consists of (from left) Jack Fischer, Fyodor Yurchikhin, Thomas Pesquet, Peggy Whitson and Oleg Novitskiy.
Expedition 36 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 36 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Russian cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov (left), commander; and Fyodor Yurchikhin, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin, NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano and NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 16 Patch.svg
This patch commemorates the sixteenth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The design represents the conjunction of two unique astronomical events: a transit of the ISS across the surface of a full moon, and a nearly complete annular eclipse of the sun. The ISS is shown in its complete configuration, symbolizing the role of this expedition in preparing for the arrival and commissioning of international partner modules and components. The ISS transit across the moon highlights its role in developing the techniques and innovations critical to enable long-duration expeditions to the lunar surface and beyond.
ISS Expedition 66 Patch.svg
The official mission insignia for International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 66, designed to resemble US highway route 66
  • The Expedition 66 patch celebrates the continued utilization of the International Space Station as a path for human and scientific space exploration.
  • Its shape reflects the Route 66 highway sign, which once guided an earlier expansion into distant, remote lands. The arc of the Earth’s atmosphere is reminiscent of the well-known stop-motion photos taken by astronauts and cosmonauts of the Earth in eclipse.
  • Two future destinations are depicted, the Moon resting inside one of the numerals, and Mars to the right. A multicolored bridge containing the colors of each of this mission’s international partner’s flags (Russia, Germany, France, Japan, and the United States) draws the viewer from the perimeter of the patch into the numeral 66 just as the space station bridges the gap from low-Earth orbit to these distant exploration destinations.
The ISS Expedition 20.jpg
Expedition 20 crewmembers take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. From the left (front row) are European Space Agency astronaut Frank De Winne, Expedition 20 flight engineer and Expedition 21 commander; cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, Expedition 19/20 commander; and cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, Expedition 20/21 flight engineer. From the left (back row) are Canadian Space Agency astronaut Robert Thirsk, Expedition 20/21 flight engineer; NASA astronauts Michael Barratt, Expedition 19/20 flight engineer; Nicole Stott, Expedition 20/21 flight engineer; Tim Kopra, Expedition 20 flight engineer; and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata, 18/19/20 flight engineer.
ISS Expedition 59 Patch.svg
The Expedition 59 crew insignia
  • The Expedition 59 patch celebrates the International Space Station’s role as a microgravity science laboratory. The crew, made up of scientists, doctors, engineers and pilots, will conduct hundreds of experiments for the benefit of mankind and our fragile environment on planet Earth.
  • The patch shape depicts the cupola windows. Through these windows, astronauts have made many significant observations of Earth’s ecosystems and they have discovered and documented real-time events like volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.
  • The position of the Earth at the top of the patch depicts where the Earth would be seen by an astronaut from the cupola. It represents the explorers’ unique perspective on his or her home. The image at the center of the patch is the station itself, the largest single structure humans have ever put into space, an engineering marvel.
  • The station is overlaid on an atom, the basic building block of all matter. The atom has three electron orbits with the flags of Russia, the United States of America and Canada, representing the home countries of the Expedition 59 crew. Like electrons in an atom, international cooperation is the basic stabilizing force that enables large scale space exploration.
  • To achieve great deeds, humans from all across the globe must work together in peace with a shared vision. The Expedition 59 patch celebrates the massive scientific accomplishments of the space station while highlighting the importance of global teamwork in understanding our planet and continuing with bold exploration in the future.
ISS Expedition 54 Patch.svg
The Expedition 54 crew insignia
  • Orbiting Earth continuously since 1998, the International Space Station (ISS) is one of our greatest engineering achievements. It is depicted in gold, symbolic of constancy and excellence. Flying toward a sunrise represents the station’s contributions to a bright future. That sunrise uses blue, white, and red, the combined national colors of Japan, Russia, and the United States, symbolizing the crew’s cohesiveness. Crewmember names are in blue, symbolizing devotion and loyalty.
  • The gold border represents the constant human presence in space onboard the orbiting laboratory. Symbolic of new Russian and U.S. spacecraft that will advance human exploration, the patch is shaped as a capsule. The number 54 is drawn as a path eventually leading to Mars.
  • Finally, the stars symbolize the values of leadership, trust, teamwork, and excellence lived by mission control teams throughout the history of human space programs, as well as the global vigilance of those teams while operating the station.
ISS Expedition 41 Patch.svg
Die Expedition-41-Crewmitglieder haben ihr Emblem herausgegeben und dazu angemerkt:
  • „Den Weg menschlicher Forschung in unserem gewaltig unbekannten Universum darstellend, bauen alle Elemente des Expedition-41-Emblems von der Grundlage, unserer Erde, auf zu den Sternen jenseits unseres Sonnensystems. Im Fokus unserer sechsmonatigen Expedition zur Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) sind die Erde und seine Bewohner wie auch der wissenschaftliche Ausblick in unser Universum. Die unverwechselbaren ISS-Sonnenkollektoren erstrecken sich vorwärts und dienen als zentrales Element, mit dem Atomsymbol unterhalb, welches die Masse an Forschung an Bord repräsentiert, welche neue Entdeckungen zum Wohle der Menschheit bringen wird. Die Sonne geht über den Erdhorizont auf, ihr Licht entlang der Straße der menschlichen Forschung ausbreitend. Ausgestattet mit dem Wissen und der Inspiration gewonnen von der ISS, wird unsere erfolgreiche multinationale Zusammenarbeit die menschliche Weltraumforschung zum Mond, Mars und letztendlich zu den Sternen führen. Wir sind die Expedition 41, schließt euch uns für das Abenteuer an.“
Expedition 61 crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition 61 crew portrait with (from left) NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan, Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov, astronaut Luca Parmitano of ESA (European Space Agency), Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka, and NASA astronauts Jessica Meir and Christina Koch.
ISS Expedition 3 crew.jpg
ISS003-S-002 (June 2001) --- Taking a break from a busy training schedule to pose for a portrait are the crew members for Expedition Three, scheduled to replace the current cosmonaut/astronaut trio aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Astronaut Frank L. Culbertson, Jr. (center), commander, is flanked by cosmonauts Mikhail Tyurin (left) and Vladimir Dezhurov, both flight engineers representing Rosaviakosmos. The three will accompany the STS-105 crew into Earth orbit aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery this summer to begin their lengthy stay on the orbital outpost.
Expedition 14 2nd part.jpg
ISS014-S-002A (30 March 2006) --- Astronaut Michael E. Lopez-Alegria (center), Expedition 14 commander and NASA space station science officer; cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin (right), flight engineer representing Russia's Federal Space Agency; and astronaut Sunita L. Williams, flight engineer, take a break from training at Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait.
ISS Expedition 25 Patch.png
The mission patch design for the 25th Expedition to the International Space Station (ISS) pays tribute to the rich history of innovation and bold engineering in the quest for knowledge, exploration and discovery in space. The patch highlights the symbolic passing of the torch to the ISS, as the vehicle that will carry us into the future of space exploration. The Space Shuttle Program emblem is the foundation of the patch and forms the Greek letter 'Alpha' with a new dawn breaking at the center, symbolizing a new vision for space exploration. The Alpha symbol is overlaid by the Greek letter 'Omega', paying tribute to the culmination of the Space Shuttle Program. The mission designation '25' is shown centered at the bottom of the patch, symbolizing the point in time when the Space Shuttle, the workhorse of the ISS assembly process, will make its final visit to the ISS. Between the '25' and the Earth crescent, the orbiter is shown returning to Earth on its final journey, during the Expedition 25 mission. Above Earth and the breaking dawn, the ISS takes center-stage, completed and fully equipped to carry us beyond this new dawn to new voyages and discoveries. The orbit connecting the ISS and the Earth is drawn in the colors of the United States and Russian flags; paying tribute to the blended heritage of the crew. The two largest stars in the field represent the arrival and departure of the crews in separate Russian Soyuz vehicles. The six stars in the field represent the six crew members. The International Space Station abbreviation 'ISS' and 'MKC' - in English and Russian, respectively - flank the mission number designation, and the names of the crew members in their native languages border the ISS symbol.
Expedition 39 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 39 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata (right), commander; and NASA astronaut Steve Swanson, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonauts Oleg Artemyev, Alexander Skvortsov, Mikhail Tyurin and NASA astronaut Rick Mastracchio, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 34 Patch.svg
The crew members of the Expedition 34 mission put together the following description of their patch: "The outer border of the Expedition 34 patch takes the mold line of a crew transfer or generic resupply vehicle which will form our bridge to the orbiting outpost throughout the second half of its operational lifetime. Inscribed inside in gold is a craft symbolizing future extra-terrestrial landers that will someday open other celestial destinations to human exploration. Our Sun, which enables the miracle of the only known life in our universe, radiates above the rich and colorful orb of Earth. Its 15 rays represent the countries of the International Space Station (ISS) Partnership whose foresight and sacrifice have enabled the first small steps into our universe. The ISS in flight represents the dedication, ingenuity, and cooperation amongst the thousands and thousands of workers around the globe who have successfully designed and built a wonder of our modern world. The distant stars, like those visible in our night sky, beckon us to come further into the depths of space. 'Off the Earth. . . For the Earth' - Our acknowledgement of the responsibility and commitment to work diligently for all inhabitants of planet Earth."
Expedition 5 insignia.svg
The International Space Station (ISS) Expedition Five patch depicts the Station in its completed configuration and represents the vision of mankind's first step as a permanent human presence in space. The United States and Russian flags are joined together in a Roman numeral V to represent both the nationalities of the crew and the fifth crew to live aboard the ISS. Crew members’ names are shown in the border of this patch. This increment encompasses a new phase in growth for the Station, with three Shuttle crews delivering critical components and building blocks to the ISS. To signify the participation of each crew member, the Shuttle is docked to the Station beneath a constellation of 17 stars symbolizing all those visiting and living aboard Station during this increment.
ISS Expedition 17 Patch.svg
The Expedition 17 patch is meant to celebrate current human achievements in space as well as symbolize the future potential for continuing exploration. The Earth, represented at the bottom of the patch, is the base from which all space exploration activities initiate. The International Space Station (ISS), shown in low Earth orbit, illustrates the current level of space operations. The arrow and star point outwards, away from the Earth, towards the wider universe indicating the direction of future activities as human beings build on what has already been accomplished. The flags, representing the home countries of the crew members, Russia and the United States, are touching, highlighting the cooperative nature of the space program and symbolizing the merger of science and technical knowledge of these two experienced space-faring nations.
ISS-Expedition 1-crew.jpg
Crew of ISS Expedition 1 launched with Soyuz TM-31
ISS Expedition One Commander William M. (Bill) Shepherd (center) is flanked by Soyuz Commander Yuri P. Gidzenko (right) and Flight Engineer Sergei K. Krikalev (left) in this crew photograph, taken during a break in training in Russia. The three, posed in front of a rendition of the International Space Station, are wearing the Sokol space suits like those they will don for their Soyuz-provided trip to ISS later this month. National flags representing all the international partners run along the bottom of the portrait.
ISS Expedition 20 Patch.svg
The Expedition 20 patch symbolizes a new era in space exploration with the first six-person crew living and working onboard ISS and represents the significance of the ISS to the exploration goals of NASA and its international partners. The six gold stars signify the men and women of the crew. The astronaut symbol extends from the base of the patch to the star at the top to represent the international team, both on the ground and on orbit, that are working together to further our knowledge of living and working in space. The space station in the foreground represents where we are now and the important role it is playing towards meeting our exploration goals. The knowledge and expertise developed from these advancements will enable us to once again leave low earth orbit for the new challenges of establishing a permanent presence on the moon and then on to Mars. The blue, gray and red arcs represent our exploration goals as symbols of Earth, the moon and Mars.
Expedition 55 crew portrait.jpg
The six-member Expedition 55 crew poses for an official crew portrait at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. In the front row (from left) are Scott Tingle of NASA, Commander Anton Shkaplerov of Roscosmos and Norishige Kanai of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. In the back row (from left) are NASA astronauts Ricky Arnold and Andrew Feustel and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev.
Expedition 28 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 28 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured from the right (front row) are Russian cosmonaut Andre Borisenko, commander; Russian cosmonaut Alexander Samokutyaev and NASA astronaut Mike Fossum, both flight engineers. Pictured from the left (back row) are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Satoshi Furukawa, NASA astronaut Ron Garan and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov, all flight engineers.
Expedition 16 Portrait.jpg
International Space Station during Expedition 16. Astronaut Peggy Whitson (front row, right), station commander; and Russia's Federal Space Agency cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko (front row, left), flight engineer and Soyuz commander, NASA astronaut Clay Anderson (back row, left), flight engineer, astronaut Dan Tani (back row, second from left), flight engineer, Leopold Eyharts of the European Space Agency (back row, third from left), astronaut Garrett Reisman (back row, far right), flight engineer.
ISS Expedition 64 Patch.png
International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 64 mission insignia
  • The Expedition 64 patch shows the International Space Station illuminated by the city lights of earth. The illumination of the space station modules represents the enduring partnership and continuous human presence on station for 20 years. The modules from all partner countries represent the international cooperation, which sustains this presence in space. The aurora and light behind the horizon are beautiful features of our home planet, and the Moon and stars in the background shows our future exploration beyond Earth.
Expedition 58 crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition crew portrait with (from left) NASA astronaut Anne McClain, Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko and astronaut David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency.
Expedition 41 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 41 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Russian cosmonaut Maxim Suraev (left), commander; and NASA astronaut Barry Wilmore, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman, European Space Agency astronaut Alexander Gerst, Russian cosmonauts Alexander Samokutyaev and Elena Serova, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 53 Patch.png
The Expedition 53 crew insignia
  • The International Space Station is our launch pad into the future of human space exploration. Collectively, our world stands at the cusp of incredible developments as a spacefaring species. Onboard the space station we continue to evolve the technologies vital to the sustainment and longevity of humans in the harsh realities of living without gravity or the protection of our atmosphere. These self-sustaining or regenerative technologies continually developed aboard the space station not only improve life here on Earth, but they are essential to human beings existence beyond low-Earth orbit (LEO).
  • The space station is the linchpin for this next great phase of development and is instrumental in expanding the use of space, not only as a worldclass science laboratory, but also as a destination for next-generation space vehicles. This journey beyond LEO is depicted in the Expedition 53 patch as we, the crew, will endeavor to accomplish the work that allows future missions to further explore our solar system. This journey will only be accomplished as an international team, represented by our multinational crew as well as by the many countries depicted on the globe.
  • The myriad of stars represent the untold number of passionate and supremely dedicated people that endeavor across the planet daily to make the space station the amazing vehicle it is as well as prepare us for the next great steps forward in space exploration.
Expedition 15a.jpg
Expedition 15 commander Fyodor Yurchikhin (center), flight engineer Oleg Kotov (right), and flight engineer Sunita Williams pose for a crew portrait
Expedition 33 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 33 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured from the left are NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, commander; along with Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, Russian cosmonaut Evgeny Tarelkin, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy and NASA astronaut Kevin Ford, all flight engineers.
Expedition 67 crew portrait.jpg
The official portrait of the seven-member Expedition 67 crew. From left are, Flight Engineers Robert Hines of NASA; Samantha Cristoforetti of ESA (European Space Agency); Denis Matveev of Roscosmos; Commander Oleg Artemyev of Roscosmos; and Flight Engineers Sergey Korsakov of Roscosmos; Jessica Watkins of NASA; and Kjell Lindgren of NASA.
ISS Expedition 10 Patch.svg
The Expedition 10 patch uses simple symbolism to describe the mission. The large Roman numeral "X," formed by the American and Russian flags, symbolizes the joint nature of this mission, as well as the fact that this flight is the 10th mission to stay on the International Space Station (ISS). The current configuration of the ISS is next to the name of the ISS Commander, while the Soyuz vehicle is placed next to the name of the Soyuz Commander. The single star and the black background signify this is a space mission.
Expedition 48 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 48 crew portrait with 46S crew (Jeff Williams, Oleg Skripochka, Aleksei Ovchinin) and 47S crew (Anatoli Ivanishin, Kate Rubins, Takuya Onishi).
ISS Expedition 67 Patch.png
Mission insignia for International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 67
  • The Expedition 67 patch celebrates our on-going international mission to conduct science and research to improve life on Earth and extend our presence in the solar system.
  • The International Space Station (ISS) is poised in the foreground to recognize the contributions of the thousands of engineers, scientists, researchers, trainers, fabricators, leaders, and dreamers who have made this miracle of engineering and sustained operations possible.
  • Our beautiful home, the planet Earth, serves as a central element of the patch, just as it is central to the ISS’s mission. While we endeavor to unlock the mysteries of the universe, we are also committed to better understanding the Earth and how we can protect it for future generations.
  • Three stars shine bright on a field of black, representing the United States, Russia, and Italy, the three countries with crewmembers on this particular expedition. The numerous stars further scattered across the night sky represent the additional countries that comprise the ISS partnership.
  • The life-giving rays of the sun represent our crew’s families, whose love and support make this endeavor possible.
Expedition 54 crew portrait.jpg
The six-member Expedition 54 crew poses for an official crew portrait at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. From left are Flight Engineers Joe Acaba and Mark Vande Hei of NASA, Commander Alexander Misurkin of Roscosmos and Flight Engineers Anton Shkaplerov of Roscosmos, Scott Tingle of NASA and Norishige Kanai of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
ISS Expedition 9 crew.jpg
Astronaut Edward M. (Mike) Fincke (left), Expedition 9 NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer, and cosmonaut Gennady I. Padalka, commander, pose for their crew portrait while in training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia for their scheduled launch in the spring of this year in a Soyuz TMA-4 spacecraft. Padalka represents the Federal Space Agency.
ISS Expedition 21 Patch.svg
Expedition 21 will be the 21st long duration mission on-board the International Space Station (ISS) and the second to include six crew members.
  • The central element of the patch is inspired by a fractal of six, symbolizing the teamwork of the six-person crew. From the basic element of one person, together six people form a much more complex and multifaceted entity, toward the infinity of the universe. The patch shows children, on Earth in the bright Sun, as our future and the reason we explore. The Soyuz and Shuttle are the vehicles that enable human space exploration today, while the International Space Station is leading to our next goals, the moon and Mars. The patch shape has six tips, geometrically sound yet reminiscent of a leaf, representing symmetry and ecological harmony, while the six stars in deep space represent the current crew and future exploration crews.
Expedition 17 crew portrait B.jpg
NASA astronauts Greg Chamitoff (left), Garrett Reisman, both Expedition 17 flight engineers; Russian Federal Space Agency cosmonauts Sergei Volkov, commander; and Oleg Kononenko, flight engineer, take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a portrait. Reisman will launch to the International Space Station on the STS-123 mission of Endeavour in March 2008, joining Expedition 16 in progress and will provide Expedition 17 with an experienced flight engineer for the first part of its increment. Volkov and Kononenko are scheduled to launch to the complex in the Soyuz TMA-12 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in April for a six-month mission. Chamitoff is scheduled to launch to the station on the STS-124 mission of Discovery in June, joining Expedition 17 in progress.
ISS Expedition 50 Patch.png
Official crew Patch of Expedition 50 on the International Space Station.
  • The Expedition 50 patch encompasses the spirit of human exploration from previous missions to the moon to current exploration on the International Space Station (ISS). The red border symbolizes future human exploration of Mars – the Red Planet. Our home planet Earth is prominent in the patch to remind us that everything done on the mission is to help people on Earth – “Off the Earth, For the Earth.” The background colors of red, white, and blue represent the national colors of all six crew members – United States, Russia, and France. The six stars represent the families of all six crewmembers. Finally, the numeral 50 signifies the 50th Expedition to the ISS.
ISS Expedition 19 Patch.svg
Expedition 19 bezeichnet den letzten geplanten Zeitraum mit einer Mannschaft von drei Personen bevor sie auf sechs erhöht wird und ereignet sich in den letzten Stufen des Aufbaus der Internationalen Raumstation. Der Aufnäher betont die Erde, eines der Hauptzentren der Aufmerksamkeit und Forschung vom orbitalen Außenposten. Die Skizze hebt die Schönheit des Heimatplaneten und der ihn umkreisenden Station genauso hervor wie die Sonne als unangefochtenen 'hellsten Stern am Himmel'.
ISS Expedition 47 Patch.svg
ISS Expedition 47 Insignia
  • The central depiction of the International Space Station (ISS) is in recognition of the international achievement of designing, building and maintaining a world-class space laboratory. The orientation of the ISS represents the view seen by the Soyuz crewmembers as they approach the station. The blackness of space in the background portrays the limitless area that humankind has yet to explore.
  • The efforts of the Expedition 47 crew will contribute to the growing body of knowledge and expertise that will allow us to extend human exploration beyond low-Earth orbit. The three blue colors are from the flags of the Expedition 47 crew’s home countries (United States, Russia and the United Kingdom), representing a fundamental commonality among each of the international partner countries whom the crewmembers serve.
ISS Expedition 35 Patch.svg
Geschmückt mit einer hervortretenden 35 für die 35. Expedition zur Internationalen Raumstation (ISS), stellt dieses Emblem einen naturgemäßen, vom Mond beschienenen Anblick der Erde von der ISS aus dar. Dies geschieht im Moment des Sonnenaufgangs, einer von 16 jeden Tag bei Orbitalgeschwindigkeit, mit leuchtenden Bändern, da das helle Sonnenlicht von der Erdatmosphäre in seine Grundfarben zerstreut wird. Die Erde ist dargestellt, wie sie häufig aus dem All erscheint - ohne erkennbare Küstenlinien oder Grenzen - so wie die internationale Bemühung des Zusammenlebens und -arbeitens im Weltraum die technischen und kulturellen Grenzen zwischen den Nationen verwischt. Die ISS steht unbemerkt im Mittelpunkt der Abbildung, weil der Blick aus einem Fenster der Raumstation selbst geht, der vollen Nutzung der Raumstation als Langzeitbehausung gedenkend, von wo aus Menschen Techniken und Technologien zum weiteren Forschen entwickeln. Die Besatzung führt aus: „Die Krümmung des Erdhorizonts mit den hellen Sonnenstrahlen schlägt einen imaginären Bogen zum Mars und dem Kosmos, wo unsere Spezies eines Tages gedeihen möge.“
ISS Expedition 46 Patch.svg
The 46 icon in the foreground of the Expedition 46 patch represents the forty-sixth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station. The graphic portrays the limb of the home planet, Earth, with the black vastness of space in the background. Earth is depicted at the top with the flags of the countries of origin of the crew members: the United States of America, Russia and the United Kingdom. The flag of the U.K. is displayed in a position of prominence in recognition of the significance of the first British astronaut flown in space for the European Space Agency. The outer border is in the shape of a triangle with an unbroken border, symbolizing the infinite journey of discovery for past, present and future space explorers. The names of the six Expedition 46 astronauts and cosmonauts are shown in the border.
Expedition 57 crew portrait.jpg
The official portrait of the five-member Expedition 57 crew. In the front row from left are Serena Auñón-Chancellor of NASA, Commander Alexander Gerst from the European Space Agency and Sergei Prokopev of Roscosmos. In the back row from left are Flight Engineers Aleksey Ovchinin of Roscosmos and Nick Hague from NASA.
Expedition 56 crew portrait.jpg
The official portrait of the Expedition 56 crew. In the front row from left are astronauts Drew Feustel of NASA and Alexander Gerst of the European Space Agency. In the rear from left are crew members Oleg Artemyev of Roscosmos, Ricky Arnold of NASA, Sergei Prokopev of Roscosmos and Serena Auñón-Chancellor of NASA.
ISS Expedition 31 Patch.png
Dünne Bögen entlang der Horizonte von Erde und Mond beschreiben die Expedition 31 der Internationale Raumstation (ISS). Die Gestalt des Emblems repräsentiert eine Ansicht unserer Galaxis. Der schwarze Hintergrund symbolisiert die Forschung in Dunkler Materie, eines der wissenschaftlichen Ziele der Expedition 31. Im Herzen des Emblems sind die Erde, ihr Mond, Mars und Asteroiden der Fokus von gegenwärtiger und zukünftiger Erforschung. Die ISS sieht man im Orbit um die Erde, mit einer Sammlung von Sternen für die Expedition 30 und 31 Mannschaften. Die kleinen Sterne stehen für die besuchenden Fahrzeuge, die während dieser Expedition an den Komplex andocken.
ISS Expedition 12 Patch.svg
The Expedition 12 patch represents both mankind's permanent presence in space and future dreams of exploration. The International Space Station (ISS), featured prominently in the center, will continue to grow in its capability as a world-class laboratory and test bed for exploration. The vision of exploration is depicted by the moon and Mars. The star symbolizes mankind's destiny in space and is a tribute to the space explorers who have been lost in its pursuit. The Roman numeral XII in the background signifies the 12th expeditionary mission to the ISS.
Expedition 34 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 34 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are NASA astronaut Kevin Ford (left), commander; and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy, Evgeny Tarelkin, Roman Romanenko and NASA astronaut Tom Marshburn, all flight engineers.
Expedition 14 1st part.jpg
Astronaut Michael E. Lopez-Alegria (center), Expedition 14 commander and NASA space station science officer; cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin (right), flight engineer representing Russia's Federal Space Agency; and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Thomas Reiter, flight engineer, take a break from training at Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait.
Expedition 63 crew greeting.jpg
The new Expedition 63 crew joined the Expedition 62 crew today a board the International Space Station. (Front row from left) NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and Roscosmos cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner. (Back row from left) NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan, Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka and NASA astronaut Jessica Meir.
Expedition 40 crew portrait.jpg
The six Expedition 40 crew members take a break from training to pose for their crew portrait. From left are cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov of Roscosmos, NASA astronaut Steve Swanson and cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev; ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst, cosmonaut Maxim Suraev and NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman. The 38S crew is composed of Swanson, Skvortsov and Artemyev. The 39S crew includes Suraev, Gerst and Wiseman.
Expedition 21 crew portrait.jpg
Mitglieder der ISS-Expedition 21: v.l.n.r. Maxim Surajew, Nicole Stott, Jeffrey Williams, Frank De Winne (Kommandant), Robert Thirsk, Roman Romanenko
Expedition 59 crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition 59 crew portrait with (from left) astronauts David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency and Anne McClain of NASA; cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko and Aleksey Ovchinin of Roscosmos; and NASA astronauts Nick Hague and Christina Koch.
Expedition 19 crew portrait.jpg

Equipage de l'expédition 19 vers l'ISS.

ISS019-S-002 --- Cosmonaut Gennady Padalka (center), Expedition 19 commander; NASA astronaut Michael Barratt (left) and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata, both flight engineers, take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Padalka and Barratt are scheduled to launch to the International Space Station in the Soyuz TMA-14 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in March 2009. Wakata will fly to the station on STS-119 and will serve as a flight engineer for Expeditions 18 and 19.
ISS Expedition 38 Patch.svg
ISS Expedition 38 Patch
As the International Space Station (ISS) has become a stepping stone to future space exploration, the Expedition 38 mission patch design paints a visual roadmap of exploration beyond low Earth orbit, most prominently represented by the design's flowing Expedition 38 mission numbers that wrap around Earth, the moon and Mars. Just as the sun is a guiding light in the galaxy, the ISS illuminates the bottom of the design as it is a shining beacon of the advancement of science, knowledge, and technology carried out aboard the Space Station. To visually capture the idea of the ISS being a foundation for infinite discovery, the space station's iconic solar arrays span upwards, providing the number 38 and its exploration roadmap a symbolic pedestal to rest on. Finally, the overall use of red, white, and blue in the design acknowledges the flags of the countries of origin for Expedition 38's crew -- the United States, Russia, and Japan.
ISS Expedition 33 Patch.svg
Das Expedition-33-Emblem stellt die Internationale Raumstation (ISS) dar, wie sie die Erde in Richtung Zukunft umkreist. Die Nationalflaggen Japans, Russlands und der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika repräsentieren die Crew der Expedition 33, welche aus sechs Astronauten und Kosmonauten aus Japan, Russland und den Vereinigten Staaten besteht. Die fünf weißen Sterne repräsentieren die Partner im ISS-Programm – Kanada, die europäischen Länder, Japan, Russland und die Vereinigten Staaten. Die Expedition 33 wird die Arbeit der vorhergehenden 32 Expeditionsmannschaften an Bord des multinationalen Laboratoriums fortsetzen z. B. in Bereichen der Biologie und Biotechnologie, der Geowissenschaften und der Weltraumforschung, der Bildung, der menschlichen Forschung, der Natur- und Materialwissenschaften und der Technologieentwicklung und -vorführung.
Expedition 45 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 45 crew portrait with (from left) Commander Scott Kelly and Flight Engineers Sergey Volkov, Mikhail Kornienko, Kjell Lindgren, Oleg Kononenko and Kimiya Yui.
ISS Expedition 39 Patch.svg
ISS Expedition 39 Patch
Increment 39 of the International Space Station Program marks the 15th year of operation since the start of the space laboratory assembly. Today, the U.S., Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency are partnering in the operation of the largest ever orbital outpost managed by humankind. The names of the six crew members are depicted in their native languages. For Expedition 39, the Soyuz spacecraft serves as transport vehicle for the crew members to and from the station. During this expedition, the ISS will serve as a platform for scientific research, Earth and astronomical observation, education, as well as a stage for the development of new technologies used for the exploration beyond low Earth orbit. The star above the complex signifies human space exploration towards new frontiers. The crew members added these words: "The crew of Expedition 39 is proud to serve the international community in furthering our scientific knowledge and in expanding human presence in space."
Expedition 26 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 26 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured clockwise from the right are NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, commander; NASA astronaut Catherine Coleman, Russian cosmonauts Dmitry Kondratyev, Oleg Skripochka, Alexander Kaleri and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Paolo Nespoli, all flight engineers.
Expedition 47 crew portrait.jpg
Official Expedition 47 crew portrait with 45S crew (Yuri Malenchenko/Tim Kopra/Tim Peake) and the 46S crew (Jeff Williams, Oleg Skripochka, Aleksei Ovchinin)
Expedition 23 crew members.jpg
Expedition 23 crew members. From the left are Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, NASA astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson, Russian cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov, all flight engineers; Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, commander; NASA astronaut T.J. Creamer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Soichi Noguchi, both flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 52 Patch.svg
The Expedition 52 crew insignia
  • Our planet is shown surrounded by an imaginary constellation shaped like a house, depicting the theme of the patch: “The Earth is our home.” It is our precious cradle, to be preserved for all future generations. The house of stars just touches the Moon, acknowledging the first steps we have already taken there, while Mars is not far away, just beyond the International Space Station, symbolized by the Roman numeral “LII,” signifying the expedition number.
  • The planets Saturn and Jupiter, seen orbiting farther away, symbolize humanity’s exploration of deeper space, which will begin soon. A small Sputnik is seen circling the Earth on the same orbit with the ISS, bridging the beginning of our cosmic quest till now: Expedition 52 will launch in 2017, sixty years after that first satellite.
  • Two groups of crew names signify the pair of Soyuz vehicles that will launch the astronauts of Expedition 52 to the Station.
Expedition 38 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 38 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Koichi Wakata (left), flight engineer; and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, commander. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin, NASA astronaut Rick Mastracchio, Russian cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy and NASA astronaut Michael Hopkins, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 40 Patch.png
The Expedition 40 patch depicts the past, present, and future of human space exploration. The crew wrote the description that follows: The reliable and proven Soyuz, our ride to the International Space Station (ISS), is a part of the past, present, and future. The ISS is the culmination of an enormous effort by many countries partnering to produce a first-class orbiting laboratory, and its image represents the current state of space exploration. The ISS is immensely significant to us as our home away from home and our oasis in the sky. The commercial cargo vehicle is also part of the current human space exploration and is a link to the future. A blend of legacy and future technologies is being used to create the next spacecrafts which will carry humans from our planet to destinations beyond. The sun on Earth's horizon represents the new achievements and technologies that will come about due to our continued effort in space exploration.
Expedition 31 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 31 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko (right), commander; and Gennady Padalka, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are NASA astronaut Joe Acaba, Russian cosmonaut Sergei Revin, European Space Agency astronaut Andre Kuipers and NASA astronaut Don Pettit, all flight engineers.
Background was inspired by Van Gogh's "Starry Night".
ISS Expedition 10 crew.jpg
The crewmembers for Expedition 10 take a break from training in the United States, Russia and other venues to pose for their crew portrait. Astronaut Leroy Chiao, left, is commander and NASA ISS science officer. Cosmonaut Salizhan S. Sharipov, representing Russia’s Federal Space Agency, is flight engineer.
ISS Expedition 49 Patch.png
The Expedition 49 crew insignia
ISS Expedition 13 Patch with Reiter.svg
This patch commemorates the thirteenth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station (ISS) which continues the permanent human presence in space. The ISS is depicted in its configuration at the start of the six-month expedition with trailing elements from the country flags representing each of the three crew members.
  • The crew members made the following statement about their patch: "The dynamic trajectory of the space station against the background of the Earth, Mars, and the Moon symbolizes the vision for human space exploration beyond Earth orbit and the critical role that the ISS plays in the fulfillment of that vision."
ISS Expedition 26 Patch.png
Die Internationale Raumstation sticht im Vordergrund des Emblems heraus, um die Leistungen des gesamten ISS-Teams zu würdigen. Beide, die Mannschaften, welche die Station aufgebaut haben und in Betrieb halten und das Team von Wissenschaftlern, Ingenieuren und Unterstützungspersonal auf der Erde haben den Grundstein für jede erfolgreiche Mission gelegt. Ihre Bemühungen und Vollbrachtes haben die Fähigkeiten der Raumstation als Technologieprüfstand und Wissenschaftslaboratorium demonstriert, sowie als ein Weg zur menschlichen Erkundung unseres Sonnensystems und darüber hinaus. Die ISS wird mit Johannes Kepler, dem angedockten Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV-2) der Europäischen Weltraumorganisation (ESA) gezeigt, das Experimente, Lebensmittel, Wasser und Treibstoff für die Expedition 26 und folgende liefert. Dieses Expedition-26-Emblem repräsentiert die Zusammenarbeit der internationalen Partner USA, Russland, Japan, Kanada und ESA, sowie die fortlaufende Verpflichtung jedes Partners die ISS aufzubauen, zu verbessern und nutzbar zu machen. Im Hintergrund ist unser Heimatplanet, die Erde, herausragend dargestellt, die im Brennpunkt eines großen Teils der Forschung auf unserem Weltraumaußenposten liegt. Die zwei Sterne symbolisieren die zwei Sojus-Raumschiffe, jedes eine Dreiermannschaft tragend, die für vier Monate zusammen an Bord der ISS als Expedition 26 arbeiten und leben werden. Das Emblem zeigt die Namen der Crewmitglieder und ist umrahmt von den Flaggen ihrer Herkunftsländer - Vereinigte Staaten, Russland und Italien.
Expedition 4 insignia.svg
The International Space Station (ISS) Expedition Four crew patch has an overall diamond shape, showing the "diamond in the rough" configuration of the Station during expedition four. The red hexagonal shape with stylized American and Russian flags represents the cross-sectional view of the S0 truss segment, which the crew will attach to the U.S. Lab Destiny. The persistent Sun shining on the Earth and Station represents the constant challenges that the crew and ground support team will face every day while operating the International Space Station, while shedding new light through daily research. The green portion of the Earth represents the fourth color in the visible spectrum and the black void of space represents humankind's constant quest to explore the unknown.
ISS Expedition 56 Patch.svg
The Expedition 56 crew insignia
  • The Expedition 56 astronaut crew will continue the international collaborative work that has been evolving on the International Space Station during the past 17 years. The expedition comes at a time when private corporations and the governments around the world are rapidly developing crew capabilities for human space exploration. Together, with the experience and continued research on the orbiting laboratory, humans will soon establish a new presence in space beyond low-Earth orbit that will enable us to travel farther into space than ever before.
  • The Expedition 56 patch portrays a dove carrying an olive branch on its beak. The patch includes images of the Soyuz launch vehicle for the crew and the space station. The Expedition 56 astronauts’ names are displayed on the dove’s wings and along the limb of Earth at the base of the patch.
  • The dove's tail is firmly planted on Earth to represent the strong link between our home planet and the humans who are sent into the cosmos. The patch illustrates our hope for peace and love in the world, and the innate human desire to spread our wings and explore into the future, building on the wisdom of the past, for the betterment of humanity. The patch was designed by astronaut Drew Feustel's son.
ISS Expedition 43 Patch.svg
The hexagon (six-sided) shape of the Expedition 43 patch represents the six crew members living and working onboard the orbital outpost. The International Space Station (ISS) is portrayed in orbit around the Earth, representing the multi-national partnership that has constructed, developed, and continues to operate the ISS for the benefit of all humankind. The sunrise marks the beginning of a new day, reflecting the fact that we're at the dawn of our history as a space faring species. The moon and planets represent future exploration of our solar system, for which the ISS is a stepping stone. Finally, the five stars honor the crews who have lost their lives during the pursuit of human spaceflight.
Expedition 60 crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition 60 crew portrait with (clockwise from top right) astronauts Nick Hague of NASA and Luca Parmitano of ESA (European Space Agency), Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov, NASA astronauts Drew Morgan and Christina Koch and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin.
Expedition 18 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 18 crewmembers take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a group portrait. From the left (front row) are NASA astronaut Michael Fincke and Russian Federal Space Agency cosmonaut Yury Lonchakov, commander and flight engineer, respectively. From the left (back row) are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Koichi Wakata, NASA astronauts Sandra Magnus and Greg Chamitoff, all flight engineers. Chamitoff will launch to the International Space Station (ISS) on the STS-124 mission, joining Expedition 17 in progress and will provide Expedition 18 with an experienced flight engineer for the first part of its increment. Fincke and Lonchakov are scheduled to launch to the station in the Soyuz TMA-13 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in October for a six-month mission. Magnus is scheduled to join Expedition 18, replacing Chamitoff, as flight engineer after launching to the ISS on mission STS-126. Wakata is scheduled to join Expedition 18, replacing Magnus, as flight engineer after launching to the orbital complex on mission STS-119.
ISS Expedition 65 Patch.png
International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 65 mission insignia
  • The International Space Station Expedition 65 patch depicts the space station as it appears during the time the crew will be onboard. The space station flying over the Earth represents the overall reason for having a space station; to benefit the world through scientific research and international cooperation in space. When this expedition begins, the space station will have provided continued human presence in space for more than twenty years. Blue, the background color of the patch, symbolizes reliability.
  • The stars represent the crew onboard the space station, as well as mission control centers located on three continents. Those stars, in that field of blue, also symbolize the thousands of space workers throughout the space station partnership who continue to contribute to the success of our International Space Station.
ISS Expedition 14 patch.svg
This emblem embodies the past, present, and future of human space exploration. The Roman numeral XIV suspended above the Earth against the black background of space symbolizes the fourteenth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station (ISS), or Международная Космическая Станция. Elements of this symbol merge into a unified trajectory destined for the moon, Mars, and beyond, much as science and operations aboard the ISS today will pave the way for future missions to our celestial neighbors. The five stars honor the astronauts and cosmonauts of missions Apollo 1, Soyuz 1, Soyuz 11, Challenger, and Columbia, who gave their lives in the pursuit of knowledge and discovery.
ISS Expedition 30 Patch.png
Das Programm der Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) beendet den Übergang vom Aufbau zur vollen Nutzung, während die Menschheit den goldenen Jahrestag der Weltraumforschung feiert. In Anerkennung dieser Meilensteine und besonders des Beitrages derjenigen, deren Engagement und Einfallsreichtum Raumfahrt möglich macht, wird eine komplett aufgebaute ISS gezeigt, die sich über einen sonnenbeschienenen Erdrand emporschwingt. Ostwärts des sonnenbestrahlten Randes ist die auffällige Schilderung der durch nächtliche Stadtbeleuchtung illuminierten Erdoberfläche eine Erinnerung an die Anwesenheit der Menschheit auf dem Planeten, sichtbar nur nachts vom Weltraum aus. Und gedenkt, wie menschliche Wesen ihre früheren Fesseln während der letzten 50 Jahre der Weltraumforschung überwunden haben. Die ISS, ein einzigartiger weltraumgestützter Außenposten für Forschung in Bio-, Natur-, Weltraum- und Geowissenschaften, ist mit den Worten der Crewmitglieder ein eindrucksvolles Testament der großartigen Zusammenarbeit der Ingenieure, Wissenschaftler und Techniker aus 15 Ländern und 5 nationalen Raumfahrtagenturen. Die sechs Crewmitglieder der Expedition 30, genauso wie diejenigen vor ihnen, fühlen sich geehrt, ihre Länder und das ISS-Team, das die Forschung an Bord der Station ausführt, zu repräsentieren und zum Wissen hinzuzufügen, welches den raumfahrenden Nationen ermöglicht, sicherer und produktiver zu leben, zu arbeiten und das All zu erforschen, den Weg zu ebnen für zukünftige Missionen über den niedrigen Erdorbit hinaus und junge Leute zu begeistern, sich diesem großen Abenteuer anzuschließen.
ISS Expedition 18 patch.svg
Das Emblem repräsentiert die 18. Expedition zur Internationalen Raumstation ISS. Die römische Ziffer XVIII sticht deutlich heraus. Das "X" beschwört die Forschung, welche das Herzstück der unteilbaren Zusammenarbeit der Partner der Internationalen Raumstation ist. "V" steht für Sieg und für die fünf Weltraumagenturen im ISS-Programm. "III" steht für die Hoffnung, dass diese Crew helfen wird, die ISS weiter zu entwickeln von der Ermöglichung der letzten Drei-Personen-Mannschaft zu Mannschaften aus sechs Forschern. Mond, Sonne und Sterne symbolisieren die Anstrengungen des gesamten ISS-Teams, die zur menschlichen Erforschung des Monds, unseres Sonnensystems und darüber hinaus führen werden.
Expedition 25 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 25 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured at center right is NASA astronaut Doug Wheelock, commander. Also pictured (from the left) are Russian cosmonauts Oleg Skripochka and Alexander Kaleri; NASA astronauts Scott Kelly and Shannon Walker; along with Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin, all flight engineers.
The portrait's background is a photograph of the M78 nebula and its reflecting dust clouds in the constellation Orion as captured by astrophotographer Ignacio de la Cueva Torregrosa.
Expedition 22 crew members.jpg
Expedition 22 crew members. From the left (front row) are NASA astronaut Jeffrey Williams, commander; and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, flight engineer. From the left (back row) are NASA astronaut T.J. Creamer, Russian cosmonaut Maxim Suraev and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Soichi Noguchi, all flight engineers.
Expedition 37 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 37 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin (left), commander; and Oleg Kotov, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg, European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano, NASA astronaut Michael Hopkins and Russian cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 60 Patch.svg
The Expedition 60 crew insignia
  • The Moon landing is one of the most extraordinary feats of humankind, an embodiment of ingenuity and desire for exploration. The patch of Expedition 60 commemorates the 50th anniversary of that landing: a constellation of three stars with the Moon superimposed forms the letter “L,” the Latin symbol for 50. The Moon is depicted as a waxing crescent, as it was on July 20, 1969.
  • The familiar silhouette of the International Space Station is visible, flying across the night sky. Stars, numerous and bright as seen from the space station, form the shape of an eagle in the same pose as on the iconic patch of the Apollo 11 mission. The sunrise represents the fact that we are still in the early stages of humanity’s exploration of space.
  • The hexagonal shape of the patch represents the space station's cupola, with the six points of the hexagon symbolizing the six crewmembers of Expedition 60. The names and nationalities are not present, as on the original Apollo 11 mission patch, to highlight that space missions – then, now, and in the future – are for Earth and all humankind.
ISS Expedition 58 Patch.svg
The official insignia for the three-member Expedition 58 crew with Anne McClain of NASA, Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency.
  • Thousands of people worldwide dedicate their lives to the human exploration of space. As one team, we strive to learn, discover and pioneer for the benefit of all mankind. The Expedition 58 patch is a crew tribute to those thousands who stand ready every day committed to supporting this mission.
  • Central to the patch is the compass rose—a symbol of exploration past, present and future. The passing of the International Space Station from darkness into light suggests that we are only just peaking over the horizon, looking forward to advancing human understanding of our place in the universe.
  • The crew of Expedition 58 are fortunate explorers … never alone in their journey. Among the night lights on the Earth are glints of brightness – the global team and major control facilities that keep the space station on orbit and its inhabitants on track.
  • And as the explorers from centuries past used stars to guide their way, so too does the crew of Expedition 58. The stars on the Expedition 58 patch are their families, one star for each member. They shine on as a beacon of strength and a guiding light home.
Expedition 1 insignia.svg
The first International Space Station crew patch is a simplified graphic of the station complex when fully completed. The station is seen with solar arrays turned forward. The last names of the Expedition One crew, Soyuz pilot Yuri Gidzenko, flight engineer Sergei Krikalev, and expedition commander William (Bill) Shepherd, appear under the station symbol.
ISS Expedition 62 Patch.png
The official insignia of the Expedition 62 crew
  • The Expedition 62 patch embodies two main themes: first, the importance of the global partnership on which the International Space Station was founded, and second, the paradigm shifting perspective provided by seeing our planet Earth from above with human eyes. Based on a vintage mosaic found near the headquarters of the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, the two space explorers flying in formation represent friendship between space agencies and the people that work in them. The shining star in the hand is a symbol of unity under a common quest for discovery, as this partnership continues to burn bright into the future.
  • Generated by the flying astronauts, the shock wave signifies the powerful impact of human space exploration and the scientific research conducted on the space station, strengthened when we work as a team, side by side with all of our international partners. The backdrop of the large sun behind our planet Earth reminds us that we are but a very small component of our solar system and our universe. The sun is also responsible for fueling life on Earth, sustaining the biosphere (symbolized by the leaf) surrounded by the precious, fragile atmosphere (represented by the clouds).
  • This imagery reminds us of our duty to protect our home planet, to preserve our environment and to carry principles of responsible environmental stewardship with us as we explore the universe. This birch leaf combines the principal elements, embodying nature, science and the global alliance, as these trees are indigenous to regions that crewmembers from all sides call home.
Expedition 32 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 32 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured from the left are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, NASA astronaut Joe Acaba, all flight engineers; Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, commander; and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Revin, flight engineer.
Expedition 63 and SpaceX Crew Dragon Demo 2 combined crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition 63 crew portrait with (clockwise from bottom left) Doug Hurley of NASA, Anatoly Ivanishin of Roscosmos, Chris Cassidy of NASA, Ivan Vagner of Roscosmos and Bob Behnken of NASA.
STS-133 International Space Station after undocking 5.jpg
The International Space Station is featured in this image photographed by an STS-133 crew member on space shuttle Discovery after the station and shuttle began their post-undocking relative separation. Undocking of the two spacecraft occurred at 7 a.m. (EST) on March 7, 2011. Discovery spent eight days, 16 hours, and 46 minutes attached to the orbiting laboratory.
ISS Expedition 15 Patch.svg
The operational teamwork between human space flight controllers and the on-orbit crew take center stage in this emblem. Against a backdrop familiar to all flight controllers, past and present, independent of any nationality, the fifteenth expedition to the ISS is represented in Roman numeral form as part of the ground track traces emblazoned on the Mercator projection of the home planet Earth. The ISS, shown in its fully operational, assembly complete configuration, unfurls and then reunites the flags of this Russian and American crew in a show of our continuing international cooperation. Golden spheres placed strategically on the ground track near the flight control centers of the United States and Russia serve to symbolize both the joint efforts from each nation's team of flight controllers and the shuttle and Soyuz crew vehicles in their chase orbit as they rendezvous with the ISS. A rising sun provides a classic touch to the emblem signifying the perpetual nature of manned space flight operations and their origin in these two space-faring nations.
Expedition 65 crew portrait.jpg
The seven-member Expedition 65 crew with (from left) Flight Engineers Pyotr Dubrov, Shane Kimbrough, Megan McArthur and Thomas Pesquet, with Commander Akihiko Hoshide and Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Mark Vande Hei. Kimbrough, McArthur and Vande Hei are all NASA astronauts. Pesquet is an astronaut representing ESA (European Space Agency). Hoshide is a JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut. Dubrov and Novitskiy are cosmonauts representing Roscosmos.
Expedition 7 insignia.svg
The International Space Station (ISS) Expedition Seven patch consists of two elliptical orbits which evoke the histories of the two space programs from which the crew is drawn. The Russian and American flags are intersecting, representing the peaceful cooperation of the many countries contributing to the ISS. Two stars indicate the Station's goals of contributing to life on Earth through science and commerce.
Expedition 50 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 50 official crew portrait with (from left) Andrei Borisenko, Shane Kimbrough, Sergei Ryzhikov, Thomas Pesquet, Peggy Whitson and Oleg Novitsky.
Expedition 66 crew portrait.jpg
The official portrait of the seven-member Expedition 66 crew. From left are, NASA astronauts Raja Chari and Thomas Marshburn; ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Matthias Maurer; Roscosmos cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Dubrov; and NASA astronauts Kayla Barron and Mark Vande Hei.
Expedition 53 crew portrait.jpg
The six-member Expedition 53 crew poses for an official crew portrait at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Seated in the front (from left) are Flight Engineer Alexander Misurkin of Roscosmos and Commander Randy Bresnik of NASA. Standing in the back (from left) are NASA astronauts Joe Acaba and Mark Vande Hei, Sergey Ryazanskiy of Roscosmos and Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency.
Expedition 15.jpg
Expedition 15 crewmembers posed for photos at the conclusion of a Dec. 13 press conference at the Johnson Space Center. From the left are astronaut Clayton C. Anderson, flight engineer; along with cosmonauts Oleg Kotov, flight engineer and Soyuz commander; and Fyodor Yurchikhin, commander. Kotov and Yurchikhin represent Russia's Federal Space Agency.
Expedition 9 insignia.svg
This emblem represents the Ninth Expedition to the International Space Station. The Soyuz rocket and letter "X" combine into the Roman numeral IX. The "X" evokes Exploration, which is at the core of the indivisible partnership of the two space pioneering nations. Research aboard ISS will lead to human exploration of the Moon and Mars. This pursuit is strengthened by the common memory of the astronauts and cosmonauts who gave their lives in this valiant endeavor. Their stars form the leading edge of the wings of the eagle spirit that embodies Human Space Flight. The Astronaut symbol is flanked by the Expedition 9 crew names leaning together, with a "9" stylized as the plume of their rocket. The baton of great discovery is passed to the crew of the spaceship advancing to their orbital outpost.
Expedition 44 crew portrait.jpg
Official Expedition 44 crew portrait
  • Soyuz 42 (Gennady Padalka, Mikhail Kornienko, Scott Kelly) and Soyuz 43 (Oleg Kononenko, Kimiya Yui and Kjell Lindgren)
ISS Expedition 23 Patch v2.svg
Der Brennpunkt des Expedition-23-Emblems illustriert den wunderschönen Planeten Erde in der schwarzen Weite des Alls. Die Bahn der Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) im Orbit fliegt durch die XXIII um zu zeigen, dass dieser Zugewinn auf den vorherigen Missionen aufbaut und die Grundlage für zukünftige Missionen ist. Dies zeigt die Arbeit an Bord des Orbitalkomplexes, die letztendlich den Weg zu Missionen zum Mond, Mars und darüber hinaus ebnen wird. Die Missionsbezeichnung benutzt römische Ziffern um die Heimatnationen der Crew zu zeigen, die durch ihre Nationalflaggen repräsentiert werden. Die zwei Sterne symbolisieren die zwei Teams, die diese Expeditionscrew ausmachen.
Expedition 52 crew portrait.jpg
The Expedition 52 crew members (front row, from left) are Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and NASA astronaut Randy Bresnik. In the back row (from left) are, NASA astronauts Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson, European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli and Roscosmos cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy.
ISS Expedition 42 Patch.svg
The rectangular-shaped design portrays the International Space Station orbiting planet Earth with its solar array wings spread wide. Facing the sun with the lower left outboard solar array feathered, the left array portrays a prominent number "4" and the fully deployed arrays on the right form the Roman numeral version of "2," which signifies the two increment crews which, together, comprise the six-member international Expedition "42" crew. The crew and all supporting personnel around the world are also represented by the six stars adorning the sky around the complex.
Expedition 42 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 42 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are NASA astronauts Barry Wilmore (left), commander; and Terry Virts, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonauts Elena Serova, Alexander Samoukutyaev and Anton Shkaplerov and European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti, all flight engineers.
Expedition 6 insignia.svg
The International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 6 crew patch depicts the station orbiting the Earth on its mission of international cooperation and scientific research. The Earth is placed in the center of the patch to emphasize that work conducted aboard this orbiting laboratory is intended to improve life on our home planet. The shape of the Space Station’s orbit symbolizes the role that experience gained from ISS will have on future exploration of our solar system and beyond. The American and Russian flags encircling the Earth represent the native countries of the Expedition 6 crew members, which are just two of the many participant countries contributing to the ISS and committed to the peaceful exploration of space.
ISS Expedition 44 Patch.svg
This is the insignia for the Expedition 44 mission.
  • The International Space Station is positioned in the foreground poised to study Earth, the sun and cosmos that lie beyond. Two members of the Expedition 44 crew will spend a full year on the ISS - providing valuable experience for future long duration missions into deep space. The 12 Earths represent the planet's position around the sun over the course of that year. Four of the Earths are silhouetted in sunlight representing the four month duration of Expedition 44. The nine stars in the background represent the nine individuals that will visit and work on the ISS during the course of the expedition, including the six-member crew, whose names are inscribed around the patch's border, and the three-person Soyuz "taxi" crew. The use of ellipses and circles throughout the patch reflect a theme of "completion" or "return," as investments made in this orbiting laboratory return benefit to the Earth and its inhabitants.
ISS Expedition 61 Patch.svg
The mission insignia for the Expedition 61 crew with Commander Luca Parmitano of ESA (European Space Agency), NASA astronauts Drew Morgan, Christina Koch and Jessica Meir and Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Skripochka.
  • The Expedition 61 patch represents an exciting and dynamic time aboard the International Space Station as it constantly advances towards a limitless future in space. The overall patch view is from an approaching vehicle in pursuit of the space station. The sun is the most prominent, central element in the patch as the source of energy and life for the Earth, the station and our entire solar system. As the present focus of human spaceflight, the space station is centered in the emblem while barely eclipsing the sun with its tiny shadow, reminding of us that human exploration is a small part of our quest to understand the universe.
  • Fifteen of the sun’s rays represent the 15 original partner members of the space station program, while the 16th ray represents an open invitation for continued collaboration with new partners. The four yellow rays form the cardinal directions of a compass, symbolizing the innate human drive to explore. The advancing terminator represents the dawn of a new day on Earth. The name ring appears to float through space and has no single orientation, emphasizing the variety of viewpoints assembled in an international crew unified under one mission. Nine rays extend beyond the name ring to represent the nine human missions that have braved exploration beyond low-Earth orbit, thus encouraging us to drive boundlessly out into our solar system.
ISS Expedition 45 Patch.png
The Expedition 45 crew will conduct its journey of exploration and discovery from a summit whose foundation was built by past generations of pioneers, scientists, engineers and explorers. This foundation is represented by the book of knowledge at the bottom of the patch. Curves radiate from the book representing the flow of knowledge - and the hard work, sacrifice and innovation that makes human spaceflight possible. The pages written during Expedition 45 will serve to benefit humanity on Earth and in space. The International Space Station is represented by a single bright star soaring over the Earth, illuminating a path to future, more distant destinations.
Expedition 43 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 43 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured from the right are NASA astronaut Terry Virts, commander; along with Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti, Russian cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, all flight engineers.
Expedition 35 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 35 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield (right), commander; and Russian cosmonaut Pavel Vinogradov, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin, NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko and NASA astronaut Tom Marshburn, all flight engineers.
ISS expedition 13 crew with reiter.jpg
From the left: Thomas Reiter, German ESA astronaut and flight engineer, Cosmonaut Pavel V. Vinogradov, mission commander representing Russia's Federal Space Agency and astronaut Jeffrey N. Williams, NASA space station science officer and flight engineer, crew of ISS Expedition 13 as of July 4, 2006.
Expedition 8 insignia.svg
This emblem represents the eighth long-duration expedition to the International Space Station. The banner encircling the Earth, as a stylized figure 8, combines the flags of the partner nations represented by the crew. The International Space Station is portrayed above the Earth in its assembly complete configuration. The names of the two crewmembers, Michael Foale and Alexander Kaleri, are depicted in the border.
ISS Expedition 2 crew.jpeg
Left to right :

De gauche à droite : James S. Voss, Yury V. Usachev, Susan J. Helms. Crew for the Expedition 2 to the ISS. (February 2001, NASA)

Cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev (center), Expedition Two mission commander, is flanked by the other crew members--astronauts James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms--who will join him for an extended stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS), beginning in March of this year. Usachev represents the Russian Aviation and Space Agency. The flags representing all the international partners are arrayed at bottom.
Expedition 24 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 24 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured clockwise are Russian cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov (bottom), commander; NASA astronauts Tracy Caldwell Dyson and Doug Wheelock; Russian cosmonauts Mikhail Kornienko and Fyodor Yurchikhin; along with NASA astronaut Shannon Walker, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 27 Patch.png
Das Expedition 27 Emblem stellt die Internationale Raumstation (ISS) dar, die herausgestellt die Erde umkreist, ihre Mission für Wissenschaft, Technologie und Bildung fortsetzend. Die ISS ist eine immerwährende Erinnerung an die Kooperation zwischen den Vereinigten Staaten, Russland, Japan, Kanada und der Europäischen Weltraumagentur (ESA) – und an die wissenschaftlichen, technischen und kulturellen Leistungen, die aus dieser einzigartigen Zusammenarbeit resultieren. Die ISS wird in ihrem fertigen Zustand mit dem letzten Zusatz Alpha Magnetspektrometer gezeigt, sowie mit zwei Versorgungsfahrzeugen, die an jedem Ende der Station angedockt sind. Im Vordergrund wird auch das Sternbild Kreuz des Südens gezeigt und dessen fünf Sterne, zusammen mit der Sonne, symbolisieren die internationalen Crewmitglieder, die auf der Raumstation leben und arbeiten. Das Kreuz des Südens ist eines der kleinsten modernen Sternbilder und außerdem eines der auffälligsten. Es hat kulturelle Bedeutung auf der ganzen Welt und inspiriert Menschen, die Grenzen ihrer Welten zu verschieben, ganz gleich ob im Weltraum oder auf dem Boden.
ISS Expedition 36 Patch.png
The dynamic design of the Expedition 36 patch portrays the International Space Station's (ISS) iconic solar arrays. The slanted angles denote a kinetic energy leading from the Earth in the lower right to the upper left tip of the triangular shape of the patch, representing the infinite scientific research, education, and long-duration spaceflight capabilities the ISS provides with each mission, as well as our goal for future exploration beyond the Space Station. The numbers 3 and 6 harmoniously intertwine to form expedition number 36 and its gray coloration signifies the unity and neutrality among all of the international partners of the ISS. The blue and gold color scheme of the patch represents the subtle way the central gold orbit wraps around the number 36 to form a trident at its lower right tip. The trident also symbolizes the sea, air, and land, all of which make up the Earth from where the trident originates in the design.
ISS Expedition 37 Patch.png
Leonardo da Vincis vitruvianischer Mensch, erschaffen etwa vor 525 Jahren als eine Mischung aus Kunst und Wissenschaft sowie als Symbol des medizinischen Berufsstandes, wird zwischen den Umlaufbahnen einer Vielzahl von Satelliten dargestellt, die die Erde mit großer Geschwindigkeit umkreisen. Da Vincis Zeichnung, basierend auf den Proportionen eines Mannes, der vom römischen Architekten Vitruv beschrieben wurde, wird oft gebraucht als Symbol der Symmetrie des menschlichen Körpers und des Universums im Allgemeinen. Die nahezu perfekt symmetrische Internationale Raumstation mit ihren ausgebreiteten Sonnensegeln und beleuchtet von den ersten Strahlen des Sonnenaufgangs ist abgebildet als mächtiges Leuchtfeuer, welches sich aufwärts über unsere nächtlichen Horizonte bewegt als ultimatives Symbol von Wissenschaft und Technologie unseres Zeitalters. Sechs Sterne repräsentieren die sechs Mitglieder der Expedition-37-Crew, welche zwei Kosmonauten mit medizinischem Hintergrund, sowie einen Einheimischen aus Da Vincis Italien beinhaltet.
ISS Expedition 8 crew.jpg
Astronaut C. Michael Foale (right), Expedition 8 mission commander, and cosmonaut Alexander Y. Kaleri, flight engineer, pose for their crew portrait while in training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia for their scheduled launch in a Soyuz TMA-3 spacecraft later this year. Kaleri represents Rosaviakosmos.
ISS Expedition 55 Patch.svg
The official mission insignia of the Expedition 55 crew.
  • The six crew members of Expedition 55 are patriots from three different countries – Japan, Russia, and the United States. The crew from these three countries will work together to ensure the success of Expedition 55.
  • The three rings symbolize the three countries of the six crew members. The rings join in a common intersection, symbolizing collaboration and a common focus for the crew aboard the space station. The colors of the rings represent the energy and power required to carry humans and equipment into space and to operate the ISS. The colors blue and green represent the magnificent beauty of Earth. The color black represents the darkness of space, and the immense challenge of exploring space. The six stars represent the crew, Norishige Kanai, Scott Tingle, Anton Shkaplerov, A.J. (Drew) Feustel, Oleg Artemyev, and Ricky Arnold. The three flags are the flags representing each crew member’s country. The swoosh extending upward towards space represents the dedication of cosmonauts, astronauts and a multinational support team working together to explore space and discover new science that will benefit all humans.
Expedition 46 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 46 crew portrait with (from left) Commander Scott Kelly and Flight Engineers Sergey Volkov, Mikhail Kornienko, Timothy Kopra, Timothy Peake and Yuri Malenchenko.
ISS Expedition 7 crew.jpg
Expedition Seven Commander Yuri I. Malenchenko (left), and NASA ISS Science Officer and Flight Engineer Edward T. Lu pose for their crew portrait while in training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia for their scheduled launch in a Soyuz TMA-2 spacecraft later this year. Malenchenko represents Rosaviakosmos, the Russian Aviation and Space Agency.
ISS Expedition 22 Patch.svg
Die 22. Expedition zur Internationalen Raumstation widmet sich den letzten Schritten des Aufbaus und dem Übergang zur vollen Nutzung als Weltraumlaboratorium. Die Sonne, die für Kraft und Lebenserhaltung auf der Raumstation sorgt, leuchtet durch ein Solarmodul, während die ISS über der Erde kreist. Die Ozeane und die Atmosphäre, die für das Leben auf der Erde sorgen, sind in all ihrer Schönheit zu sehen. Der Mond schwebt in der Ferne als Ziel der nächsten Forschungsepoche. Die sechs Sterne veranschaulichen die gesteigerte Leistungsfähigkeit der Besatzung. Im Rand sind die Nationalflaggen der Mannschaftsmitglieder und deren Nachnamen in ihren Muttersprachen zu sehen. Expedition 22 setzt die Bemühung fort, das Wissen zu erlangen, welches nötig ist, die Reichweite der Forschung von der Erde zum Mond und darüber hinaus zu erweitern.
ISS Expedition 28 Patch.png
In the foreground of the Expedition 28 patch, the International Space Station is prominently displayed to acknowledge the efforts of the entire International Space Station (ISS) team – both the crews who have assembled and operated it, and the team of scientists, engineers, and support personnel on Earth who have provided a foundation for each successful mission. Their efforts and accomplishments have demonstrated the Space Station's capabilities as a technology test bed and a science laboratory, as well as a path to the human exploration of our solar system and beyond. This Expedition 28 patch represents the teamwork among the international partners – USA, Russia, Japan, Canada, and the ESA – and the ongoing commitment from each partner to build, improve, and utilize the ISS. Prominently displayed in the background is our home planet, Earth – the focus of much of our exploration and research on our outpost in space. Also prominently displayed in the background is the Moon. The Moon is included in the design to stress the importance of our planet's closest neighbor to the future of our world. Expedition 28 is scheduled to occur during the timeframe of the 50th anniversary of both the first human in space, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin and the first American in space, astronaut, Alan Shepard. To acknowledge the significant milestone of 50 years of human spaceflight, the names "Гагарин" and "Shepard" as well as "50 Years" are included in the patch design.
ISS Expedition 32 Patch.svg
Dieses Emblem repräsentiert die 32. Expedition zur Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) und die Bedeutung der Wissenschaft, die dort für gegenwärtige und zukünftige Generationen führend ist. Die Torbogengestalt des Emblems symbolisiert den „Eingang“ in zukünftige Weltraumforschungsmöglichkeiten. Die ISS, ein kreisendes Laboratorium über der Erde, bietet eine einzigartige Perspektive für Erdbeobachtung und -überwachung. Die Flamme beschreibt das Streben nach Wissen und unterstreicht die Bedeutung von Bildung als den Schlüssel zu zukünftiger menschlicher Raumfahrt. Das Astronautensymbol umkreist die Erde, die Arbeit aller Astronauten der Vergangenheit, der Gegenwart und der Zukunft würdigend. Die Namen von jedem Crewmitglied auf dem Rand des Emblems sind zu Ehren der verschiedenartigen Kulturen und Sprachen bei der Mission geschrieben. Die drei Flaggen stellen auch die Heimatländer der Expedition 32 Crewmitglieder dar und kennzeichnen die mitwirkende ISS-Partnerschaft von 15 Ländern als eins.
Expedition 64 crew portrait.jpg
The official Expedition 64 crew portrait with (from left) NASA astronauts Kathleen Rubins and Victor Glover, JAXA astronaut Soichi Noguchi, Roscosmos cosmonaut Sergey Ryzhikov, NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins and Shannon Walker as well as Roscosmos cosmonaut Sergey Kud-Sverchkov.
  • The expanded seven-member Expedition 64 crew with (from left) Flight Engineers Kate Rubins, Victor Glover and Soichi Noguchi, Commander Sergey Ryzhikov and Flight Engineers Michael Hopkins, Shannon Walker and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov. Rubins, Glover, Hopkins and Walker are all NASA astronauts. Noguchi is a JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut. Ryzhikov and Kud-Sverchkov are cosmonauts representing Roscosmos.
ISS Expedition 29 Patch.png
Auf dem Expedition-29-Emblem ist die Internationale Raumstation (ISS) zu sehen, wie sie dem Pfad des historischen Forschers im 18. Jahrhundert, Kapitän James Cook, und seinem Schiff, der Endeavour, folgt. Während der drei Hauptreisen von Cook erforschte und kartografierte er große Teile der Ozeane und Küstenlinien unterhalb der Flugbahn der ISS und fügte unermesslich viel zum Wissen dieser Zeit hinzu. So wie die ISS auf einem Pfad aus Sternenstaub segelt – dem Geist der Endeavour folgend, segelnd in Richtung des dunklen Unbekannten und zu neuen Entdeckungen – erleuchtet sie die Erde unter ihr. Durch die Jahrhunderte war das Streben nach neuen Entdeckungen ein bedeutsames Element des menschlichen Charakters, was uns darin bestärkt, die Mühsale und die Trennung zu ertragen, um Teil einer Mission zu sein, die größer ist als jedes menschliche Wesen. Ein Sprecher der Crew sagte dazu: „Die Besatzung der Expedition 29 ist stolz darauf, die Reise in diese großartigste aller menschlichen Anstrengungen fortzusetzen“.
Expedition 27 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 27 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured from the right are Russian cosmonaut Dmitry Kondratyev, commander; Russian cosmonaut Andre Borisenko, NASA astronaut Catherine Coleman, Russian cosmonaut Alexander Samokutyayev, European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Paolo Nespoli and NASA astronaut Ron Garan, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 48 Patch.png
The Expedition 48 crew insignia
ISS Expedition 13 Patch.svg
This patch commemorates the thirteenth expeditionary mission to the International Space Station (ISS) which continues the permanent human presence in space. The ISS is depicted in its configuration at the start of the six-month expedition with trailing elements from the country flags representing both of the crew members--cosmonaut Pavel V. Vinogradov and astronaut Jeffrey N. Williams. The crew members made the following statement about their patch: "The dynamic trajectory of the space station against the background of the Earth, Mars, and the Moon symbolizes the vision for human space exploration beyond Earth orbit and the critical role that the ISS plays in the fulfillment of that vision."
ISS Expedition 24 Patch.svg
The official crew patch for Expedition 24, the 24th long-duration mission to the International Space Station.
  • Science and Exploration are the cornerstones of NASA's mission onboard the International Space Station (ISS). This emblem signifies the dawn of a new era in our program's history. With each new expedition, as we approach assembly complete, our focus shifts toward the research nature of this world-class facility. Prominently placed in the foreground, the ISS silhouette leads the horizon. Each ray of the sun represents the five international partner organizations that encompass this cooperative program. Expedition 24 is one of the first missions expanding to a crew of six. These crews, symbolized here as stars arranged in two groups of three, will launch on Soyuz vehicles. The unbroken flight track symbolizes our continuous human presence in space, representing all who have and will dedicate themselves as crew and citizens of the International Space Station.
Expedition 30 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 30 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, commander; and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Russian cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin; along with European Space Agency astronaut Andre Kuipers and NASA astronaut Don Pettit, all flight engineers.
ISS Expedition 57 Patch.svg
Das offizielle Insigne der Expedition 57 Mannschaft mit drei Mitgliedern
  • Menschen sind Forscher. Wir leben auf einer kosmischen Insel. Segelzusetzen in Richtung neuer Welten ist immer unsere Natur gewesen und ist der Schlüssel für unseren Fortbestand. Sobald unsere Vorfahren lernten, wie man Schiffe baut, benutzten sie diese nicht nur, um an der Küste hoch und runter zu segeln, sondern sie brachen letztendlich auf, hinter den Horizont zu reisen, um neue Kontinente zu entdecken. Die Zeit der Weltraumforschung hat gerade begonnen, ein bloßes Zwinkern eines Auges in einer äonenlangen menschlicher Forschung. Und jetzt haben wir bereits erfolgreich gewaltige Schiffe gebaut, um in die schwarzen Himmelsmeere zu stechen und wir haben abenteuerliche Reisen in das Unbekannte gewagt.
  • Das Expedition 57 Emblem ist ein Tribut an die menschliche Forschung. Es stellt ein Schiff eines Erforschers dar, dem Unbekannten überlassen, wie es unsere frühen Vorfahren taten und ist geformt wie ein Pfeil, herauszugehen zu neuen kosmischen Horizonten. Es unterstreicht den Zweck der Internationalen Raumstation als ein Weltklasse-Wissenschaftslaboratorium zum Vorteil der Menschheit und der internationalen Zusammenarbeit wie auch als das Flaggschiff der Menschheit im Weltall, welches uns auf erstaunliche Reisen voraus vorbereitet.
  • Das Expedition 57 Emblem ist gewidmet all den tausenden Menschen, die diese Reise möglich gemacht haben, durch den Beitrag ihrer Leidenschaft, harter Arbeit und Mut zu einem der faszinierendsten Projekte in der Menschheitsgeschichte.
Expedition 49 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 49 official crew portrait with (from left) Sergei Ryzhikov, Shane Kimbrough, Andrei Borisenko, Kate Rubins, Anatoli Ivanishin, and Takuya Onishi.
Expedition 68 Crew Portrait.jpg
iss068-s-002 (Feb. 7, 2022) --- The seven-member Expedition 68 crew poses for an official portrait. From left are, NASA astronaut Frank Rubio; Roscosmos cosmonaut Dmitri Petelin; Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata; NASA astronauts Josh Cassada and Nicole Mann; and Roscosmos cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Anna Kikina.
ISS Expedition 68 Patch.svg
The official insignia of the Expedition 68 mission aboard the International Space Station.
  • International Space Station Expedition 68 marks the 24th year of operation since the start of its assembly on orbit. Today, the U.S., Russia, Japan, Canada, and the European Space Agency are partnering in the operation of the largest ever orbital outpost managed by humankind.
  • Seven sparkling stars in the vastness of space represent crewmembers and experts on the ground operating the space station. Bright sunbeams illuminate the station, a platform for scientific research, Earth and astronomical observation, education, as well as development of new technologies necessary for the exploration beyond low-Earth orbit, on the Moon and Mars.
Expedition 11 insignia.svg
ISS Expedition 11 insignia.
The emblem of the eleventh expedition to the International Space Station (ISS) emphasizes the roles of the United States and the Russian Federation in the multinational ISS partnership. The two rocket plumes, in the style of the flags of these two nations, represent the Russian Soyuz vehicles and the American Space Shuttles. The ISS image shows the configuration of the orbiting Station at the start of the expedition, with docked Soyuz and Progress vehicles and the huge American solar panels. The names of the two crew members are shown on the margin of the patch. ISS Commander Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips, NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer, are expected to launch on a Soyuz vehicle and to be in orbit during the return to flight of the Space Shuttle. The crew explains, “The beauty of our home planet and the vivid contrasts of the space environment are shown by the blue and green Earth with the Space Station orbiting overhead, and by the bright stars, dark sky, and dazzling sun.”
ISS Expedition 63 Patch.png
International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 63 mission insignia, incorporating a multitude of elements, such as a stylized 63 in the orbit traces, a boot print on the lunar surface.
  • The Expedition 63 patch represents an intersection of the past and the beginning of a new dawn in human spaceflight as we continue to inhabit the International Space Station (ISS), aim towards returning to the moon and plan for the journey to Mars.
  • Thirteen illuminated stars along the top of the patch commemorate the Apollo 13 celebrating its 50th anniversary during Expedition 63. The swoosh in the shape of the number "63" orbiting around the earth and moon honors the Apollo program and the future missions to go beyond low earth orbit.
  • The atom, shown overlaid on a vibrant sunrise, is the Expedition 63 crew's call sign symbolizing the energy to revolve, or orbit around a nucleus or in their case, the Earth. The international crew depicts the importance of the collaboration in preserving the ISS as a microgravity and space environment research laboratory.
Expedition 2 insignia.svg
ISS Expedition 2 insignia.
The International Space Station Expedition Two patch depicts the Space Station as it appears during the time the second crew will be on board. The Station flying over the Earth represents the overall reason for having a space station: to benefit the world through scientific research and international cooperation in space. The number 2 is for the second expedition and is enclosed in the Cyrillic MKS and Latin ISS which are the respective Russian and English abbreviations for the International Space Station. The United States and Russian flags show the nationalities of the crew indicating the joint nature of the program. When asked about the stars in the background, a crew spokesman said they "...represent the thousands of space workers throughout the ISS partnership who have contributed to the successful construction of our International Space Station."
ISS Expedition 4 crew.jpg
Expedition Four crew members take a break from training for their scheduled upcoming stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS) to pose for the traditional pre-flight crew portrait. Cosmonaut Yuri I. Onufrienko (standing at center), mission commander, is flanked by astronauts Daniel W. Bursch (left) and Carl E. Walz, both flight engineers. The national flags of the International Partners are at the bottom of the portrait.
ISS Expedition 3 Patch.svg
ISS Expedition 3 Mission patch
It depicts the book of space history, turning from the chapter with the Russian space station Mir and the space shuttle to the next chapter, one that will be written on the blank pages of the future by space explorers working for the benefit of the entire world. Above the book is a layout of what the station will look like when completed, docked with the space shuttle. The Expedition Three crew members – astronaut Frank L. Culbertson, Jr., commander, and cosmonauts Vladimir N. Dezhurov and Mikhail Tyurin, flight engineers – had the following to say about the insignia for their scheduled mission aboard the International Space Station (ISS): “The book of space history turns from the chapter written onboard the Russian Mir Station and the U.S. Space Shuttle to the next new chapter, one that will be written on the blank pages of the future by space explorers working for the benefit of the entire world. The space walker signifies the human element of this endeavor. The star representing the members of the third expedition, and the entire multi-national Space Station building team, streaks into the dawning era of cooperative space exploration, represented by the image of the International Space Station as it nears completion.”
Expedition 29 crew portrait.jpg
Expedition 29 crew members take a break from training at NASA's Johnson Space Center to pose for a crew portrait. Pictured on the front row are NASA astronauts Mike Fossum (left), commander; and Dan Burbank, flight engineer. Pictured from the left (back row) are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Satoshi Furukawa along with Russian cosmonauts Sergei Volkov, Anatoly Ivanishin and Anton Shkaplerov, all flight engineers.