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Forum:Space Explorers & Workers
Topic:Record for longest spaceflight by a woman
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Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
Astronaut Christina Koch setting record for longest mission by a woman

A NASA astronaut is set to break a record for time spent in space, and she still has six weeks to go before she returns to Earth.

Christina Koch will surpass the record for the single longest space mission by a woman as previously established by NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson in 2017. The 40-year-old Expedition 61 flight engineer will exceed Whitson's 289 days, 5 hours and 1 minute on Saturday (Dec. 28) at 6:16 p.m. CST (0016 GMT on Dec. 29).

Robert PearlmanNASA video
NASA astronaut Christina Koch now has a new place in the record book, for the longest single spaceflight ever by a female astronaut or cosmonaut: 228 days as of December 28, and still counting. Take a look as the previous record-holder, former astronaut Peggy Whitson, sends her congratulations!
Robert PearlmanNASA video
NASA astronaut Christina Koch now has a new place in the record book, for the longest single spaceflight ever by a female astronaut or cosmonaut: 228 days as of December 28, and still counting. She's getting congratulations from Naomi Ackie and Kelly Marie Tran, two women who went to space "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away!"
SPACEFACTSPeggy Whitson was with Soyuz MS-03 289 days 5 hours 1 minute and 29 seconds in space.
1202 AlarmYes, and it's what Robert wrote in his first post yesterday... then made the '228 days' mistake in the two others. He'll edit this as soon as he wakes up I'm sure.
Robert PearlmanThe citation, including "228 days," is a quote from NASA's video captions copied from YouTube. It is apparently a typo based on the 288 days used on the agency's website and in its social media posts.

Joachim is correct, the record was 289 days (5 hours and 1 minute).

Blackarrow
quote:
Originally posted by David C:
I think it's a real shame she's not doing the extra 37 days.
Don't worry! Apparently, these days 340 days count as "a year" in space, so why not 328? Call it a year in space and no one will notice.
David CWell yes, there is that option again.

Robert PearlmanThis should be able to go unsaid, but there is a difference between time keeping for a record claim and colloquial accounting.

No one has claimed that the first "yearlong" mission aboard the International Space Station was 365 days long. But March 2015 to March 2016 can validly be described as the span of a year. It is a colloquial label.

Back on subject, Christina Koch launched in March 2019 and will land in February 2020, a month shy of the span of a year. That aside, the discussion here is about a record, which requires exact figures.

Blackarrow
quote:
Originally posted by Robert Pearlman:
March 2015 to March 2016 can validly be described as the span of a year. It is a colloquial label.

You should have been a lawyer, Robert. Your argument breaks down for a mission launching in early March and returning in late February which is longer than Scott Kelly's flight but still short of a year.

As I have stated before, this in no way detracts from the achievements of his flight. The fault lies with those who attach a label to it which is incorrect, because if you label a flight of less than 365 days as "a year" then where do you draw the line?

issman1A few months ago there was talk of NASA wanting to fly an 18 month mission for one of its astronauts or an American medical doctor chosen as a space flight participant, not unlike a shuttle-era payload specialist.

Question: NASA has Christina on board, so why not take full advantage collecting data points of a 1+ year stay in microgravity?

Robert PearlmanFrom NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine, via Twitter:
Today, Christina Koch reaches a new milestone: it's been 300 days (and still counting) since her launch to the space station! Extended missions like Christina's will help scientists gather data about the effects of long-duration human spaceflight.
Robert PearlmanChristina Koch is now the new record holder for the longest single spaceflight by a woman at 328 days, 13 hours and 58 minutes.

She arrived back in Houston today. From Johnson Space Center via Twitter:

Welcome home, Christina Koch!

This morning, family, friends and coworkers were reunited with the astronaut, who landed in Kazakhstan on February 6 after a record-breaking 328-day mission to the space station. Congrats Christina!

Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
Home from space, Christina Koch reflects on move from orbit to Earth

Six days after returning from her record-setting first space mission, NASA astronaut Christina Koch said that it took longer to adjust to life in orbit than it did to transition to being back on Earth.

Koch, who spent 328 days on the International Space Station setting a record for the longest single mission by a woman, said on Wednesday (Feb. 12) that she felt at home on board the orbiting laboratory just about a third of the way into her 11-month expedition.

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