Module on the ISS. In 1992, he enrolled in the RSC Energia cosmonaut detachment, and from 1992 to 1994 he completed the basic Cosmonaut training course. Treshchov spent the next 3 years (1994 to 1996) in advanced Test Cosmonaut training. From June 1997 to February 1998, Treshchov trained as a flight engineer for the Mir station backup Exp-25 crew. From June 1999 to July 2000 he trained as a flight engineer for the
Soyuz-TM backup ISS contingency crew. Initially, he trained as backup to the ISS
Expedition 3 crew.
Expedition 5 The
Expedition 5 crew was launched on June 5, 2002, aboard
STS-111. lifted off from the
Kennedy Space Center LC-39A at 21:22:49 UTC. After two days
Endeavour docked with the
International Space Station (ISS) on June 7, 2002, at 16:25 UTC. Treshchov joined the Expedition 5 crew as a flight engineer. The Expedition 5 crew carried out approximately 25 new investigations on board the ISS, as well as continued with various science investigations begun before their stay. The scientific investigations aimed at studying cold plasma, crystal growth, radiation effects in the space and the human body. Some medical experiments involved blood, muscles, bones while the crew also conducted psychological experiments. The Expedition 5 crew returned to Earth on December 7, 2002, aboard Space Shuttle
Endeavour STS-113 mission. The shuttle touched down at KSC Runway 33 at 19:38:25 UTC. Completing his second long duration spaceflight, Treshchev logged 184 days, 22 hours and 15 minutes in space. node on the ISS.
Spacewalks Treschov performed his first and only career spacewalk on August 26, 2002. The start of the spacewalk was delayed because of an air leak in the sealed hatches between the
Pirs airlock and the
Zvezda module. The problem was easily corrected but took Treshchov and fellow cosmonaut
Valery Korzun almost a half-hour to step through the procedures and get ready to go outside. Despite the late start at 05:27 UTC, the two spacewalkers finished everything assigned to them on this spacewalk. Wearing Russian
Orlan spacesuits Treschov and Korzun installed a frame on the outside of the
Zarya module to house components for future spacewalk assembly tasks. They installed new material samples on a pair of Japanese Space Agency materials exposure experiments housed on the outside of
Zvezda. They installed devices on
Zvezda that will simplify the routing of tethers during future assembly spacewalks. The two spacewalkers also improved future station amateur radio operations by adding two ham radio antennas on
Zvezda. The spacewalk was staged from the
Pirs docking compartment airlock and lasted 5 hours and 21 minutes. ==See also==