Expedition 1 was the first long-duration stay on the International Space Station (ISS). The three-person crew stayed aboard the station for 136 days, from November 2000 to March 2001. It was the beginning of an uninterrupted human presence on the station which continues as of November 2021. Expedition 2, which also had three crew members, immediately followed Expedition 1.

The official start of the expedition occurred when the crew docked to the station on 2 November 2000, aboard the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TM-31, which had launched on 31 October 2000 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. During their mission, the Expedition 1 crew activated various systems on board the station, unpacked equipment that had been delivered, and hosted three visiting Space Shuttle crews and two uncrewed Russian Progress resupply vehicles. The crew was very busy throughout the mission, which was declared a success.

The three visiting Space Shuttles brought equipment, supplies, and key components of the space station. The first of these, STS-97, docked in early December 2000, and brought the first pair of large U.S. photovoltaic arrays, which increased the station's power capabilities fivefold. The second visiting shuttle mission was STS-98, which was docked in mid-February 2001 and delivered the US$1.4 billion research module Destiny, which increased the mass of the station beyond that of Mir for the first time. Mid-March 2001 saw the final shuttle visit of the expedition, STS-102, whose main purpose was to exchange the Expedition 1 crew with the next three-person long-duration crew, Expedition 2. The expedition ended when Discovery undocked from the station on 18 March 2001.

The Expedition 1 crew consisted of an American commander and two Russians. The commander, Bill Shepherd, had been in space three times before, all on shuttle missions which lasted at most a week. The Russians, Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei K. Krikalev, both had previous long-duration spaceflights on Mir, with Krikalev having spent over a full year in space.

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  • DeathToBritain [she/her,they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    all these fucking bland 'commitment to do x by y' from politicians at the COP26 are so fucking hollow. this is the TWENTY SIXTH of these, nothing ever changes, you never hit the targets you never implement policy you never even SLOW DOWN climate collapse. how fucking naive and blind do you think people have to be to still believe the world governments will fix anything lmao

    • DeathToBritain [she/her,they/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      every single target, promise, agreement, and so on is always ALWAYS pissed on by EVERY government. their cultist devotion to growth and production will be the death of us all. well done fuckers, you made the line go up, and all it cost was the world

          • FidelCashflow [he/him]
            ·
            3 years ago

            China is also all of the solution. If they don't figure out to to unfuck ys we aren't gonna do it.

      • AlephNull [she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        3 years ago
        aus energy minister

        Mr Taylor was pressed on whether the Commonwealth would have to stump up more money beyond 2030, to get the nation through to that 2050 deadline.

        "What a government in the 2040s, or 2045 or 2047 spends will be up to that government," he said.

        "Over the next 10 years, we've allocated $20 billion of funding.

        "Future governments will allocate as they see fit into the 2030s, and 2040s – I'm not going to commit for future governments in the 2030s and 2040s."

        lmao