Crew handovers and cargo ship movements highlight recent ISS activity
Date:
Thu, 20 Mar 2025 21:45:42 +0000
Description:
The International Space Station is now in the waning days of Expedition 72 
and is The post Crew handovers and cargo ship movements highlight recent ISS  activity appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
The International Space Station is now in the waning days of Expedition 72 
and is preparing to begin Expedition 73. The crew currently assigned to the  U.S. Orbital Segment on the Station has completed its handover, with Crew-9  returning to Earth on March 18 and Crew-10 arriving just days earlier. 
The Station is also being prepared for a crew handover in April on the 
Russian Segment and an imminent departure of a cargo ship. The visiting  vehicle complement has changed several times since 2025 began, and more  changes loom in April after a pair of upcoming launches. 
 
 Crew handovers 
After the Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams  were incorporated into the Crew-9 mission following the departure of 
Starliner Calypso without them, they spent an extra six months aboard the  Station to bring their time in space to nine months. Wilmore and Williams  served a regular ISS rotation on Crew-9 along with mission commander Nick  Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov. Crew-9 astronauts (from 
left to right) Suni Williams, Aleksandr Gorbunov, Nick Hague, and Butch  Wilmore aboard ISS. (Credit: NASA) 
Crew-10, carrying four crew members aboard Crew Dragon Endurance , launched 
to the International Space Station (ISS) from the Kennedy Space Center on  March 14 after a scrub on March 12 due to a ground support equipment issue.  The crew, consisting of NASAs Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers along with JAXAs  Takuya Onishi and Roscosmos Kirill Peskov, docked at the Harmony modules  forward port on the Station at 04:04 UTC on Sunday, March 16. 
Crew handovers on the U.S. Orbital Segment (USOS) normally last for a few 
days as the departing crew assists the arriving crew with transitioning to  Station activities and operations. The handover between Crew-9 and Crew-10 
was shorter than usual as NASA moved up Crew-9s return by a few days due to 
an unfavorable weather forecast for the end of the week. Another factor in 
the decision was to conserve consumables due to a potential delay in an  upcoming Cygnus cargo flight. 
 
The Crew-9 astronauts boarded Crew Dragon Freedom , docked to the zenith port  on the Harmony node module, and closed the hatch between Freedom and the ISS  at 03:05 UTC on Tuesday, March 18. Two hours later, at 05:05 UTC, Freedom  undocked from Harmony and left the Station. 
Crew-9 safely splashed down off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida, at 5:57 PM  EDT (21:57 UTC) on March 18 and was recovered by SpaceXs recovery ship Megan 
. All four astronauts were taken aboard the ship for post-flight medical  examination before leaving the ship to return to Houston and Russia. 
After Crew-9s return to Earth, NASA revealed that the agency is looking into  the possibility of a third uncrewed test flight for Boeings Starliner and  wanted Starliner to be a crew-capable spacecraft. The Crew-9, Crew-10, and  Soyuz MS-26 crews just after Crew-10s arrival at ISS. (Credit: NASA) 
Now that the crew handover on the USOS is complete, the Station is back to 
its regular seven crew members. NASAs Don Pettit, along with Roscosmos Soyuz  MS-26 crew commander Aleksey Ovchinin and flight engineer Ivan Vagner, are  spending their last few weeks aboard the Station before the Russian segments  upcoming crew handover in April. 
Soyuz MS-27 is scheduled to launch to the Station from Site 31/6 at the  Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Tuesday, April 8, at 05:47 UTC. 
Roscosmos crew commander Sergey Ryzhikov, flight engineer Alexey Zubritsky,  and NASAs Jonny Kim will be onboard. Ryzhikov will fly on his third flight  while Zubritsky and Kim are making their first trip to space. The MS-27 crew  will stay aboard the Station for around eight months. The Soyuz MS-27 crew in  front of the Soyuz MS-26 rocket in 2024. (Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls) 
The Soyuz spacecraft will dock to the Prichal module located at the end of 
the Nauka science module on the Russian segment, and the Soyuz MS-26 and 
MS-27 crews will conduct their handover activities to transition the new crew  to Station activities. Soyuz MS-26 is scheduled to undock from the Station 
and return to Earth on April 20. After Soyuz MS-26s undocking, Expedition 72  will end, and Expedition 73 will begin. 
Suni Williams served as ISS commander from September 2024 until March 7, when  she passed those duties to Aleksey Ovchinin during a change of command  ceremony. Ovchinin will hand over command of the Station to Takuya Onishi on  April 20, and Expedition 73 will begin with Onishi as the third Japanese  astronaut to command the ISS. 
 Upcoming cargo missions 
The first ISS cargo flight of 2025 launched on Feb. 27 at 21:24 UTC, when  Progress MS-30 lifted off from Site 31/6 in Baikonur. The Progress cargo  vehicle brought around 2,599 kg of food, fuel, and supplies to the Station,  docking at the Zvezda modules aft port. Progress MS-30 joins Progress MS-29,  docked at the Poisk module, and Soyuz MS-26, docked to the Rassvet module, as  the visiting vehicles on the Russian segment. Progress MS-28 seen after  undocking from the Zvezda module on Feb. 25. (Credit: NASA) 
Before Progress MS-30s arrival, Progress MS-28 was loaded with trash before  undocking on Feb. 25. The MS-28 spacecraft performed a destructive re-entry  into Earths atmosphere, and its departure cleared the way for MS-30 to dock 
at the aft end of Zvezda . 
Progress MS-30 performed an ISS orbit correction on Monday, March 17, to  prepare for Soyuz MS-27s arrival and the departure of Soyuz MS-26. Progress  ships docked to the Zvezda aft module are used for periodic reboosts, and  Cygnus and Cargo Dragon spacecraft can now also perform reboost maneuvers to  prevent the Stations orbit from decaying due to small amounts of atmospheric  drag. ISS visiting vehicles as of March 18, 2025. (Credit: NASA) 
The NG-21 Cygnus S.S. Francis R. Dick Scobee remains berthed to the Unity  modules nadir Common Berthing Mechanism on the USOS. However, its time in  orbit is coming to a close, and it will be loaded with trash before being  unberthed from the Station by the Canadarm2 on Friday, March 21, at 11:35 
UTC. Cygnus will perform a destructive re-entry into Earths atmosphere  afterward. 
 See Also Expedition 72 updates ISS section NSF Store Click here to Join L2 
The next Cygnus launch, NG-22, is scheduled for launch no earlier than June.  However, there are some questions about when the launch might occur due to  damage sustained by the shipping container. The pressurized cargo module of  the Cygnus was encased within the container when transported to the launch  site in Florida. The cargo module is now being inspected. This is the second  delay for NG-22, as it was delayed from February due to an avionics issue. 
Due to questions surrounding NG-22s readiness for launch, some experiments  have been removed from the next cargo ship to fly to ISS in favor of  additional consumables, including food and other essentials. CRS-32 is  scheduled to fly aboard a SpaceX Cargo Dragon from the Kennedy Space Center 
on April 21 at 4:00 AM EDT. 
 ISS activities 
After Januarys spacewalk activities, the Station crew has been busy with its  usual experiments and maintenance duties. In February, a navigation 
experiment known as the Navigation and Communication Testbed (NAVCOM) was  installed in the European Space Agencys Columbus laboratory module. 
It is hoped that NAVCOM will be a more accurate alternative to the Global  Navigation Satellite System constellations and transmit precise navigation  data across the Earth-Moon system. Nick Hague processing samples of  micro-algae as part of an experiment to produce fresh food on long  spaceflights. (Credit: NASA) 
Another highlight of the science performed during the latter part of  Expedition 72 is the BioFabrication Facility (BFF), also in the Columbus  module. The BFF is a 3D bioprinter being tested for its ability to print  biological tissues in space, and 3D bioprinting could eventually be used to  print entire biological organs. 
A full range of biological, biomedical, materials science, agricultural,  robotics, and technology experiments have been worked on during Expedition 
72, and this work will continue during Expedition 73. Samples from these  experiments are periodically sent back to Earth aboard spacecraft like Cargo  Dragon. 
No spacewalks are currently scheduled for either the USOS or Russian segment.  However, a future EVA on the USOS is expected to prepare the Stations truss  for the installation of additional iROSA solar panels to augment the ISSs  power production capabilities. Maintenance work on spacesuits was conducted 
in February in preparation for a spacewalk sometime in the spring. 
 (Lead image: Image of Crew Dragon Freedom, the USOS, and Suni Williams on a  spacewalk. Credit: NASA) 
 
The post Crew handovers and cargo ship movements highlight recent ISS 
activity appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/03/iss-roundup-032025/
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