There are currently a crew of six on the International Space Station. Expedition 32 runs through November of 2012.
The crew members are:
Akihiko Hoshide
› Yuri Malenchenko
› Suni Williams
› Joe Acaba
› Gennady Padalka (Commander)
› Sergei Revin
Crew capacity on the ISS is currently at 6.
the space shuttle and the soyuz rocket
If you mean the international space station, then there are 13 people on board
The space shuttle program was retired in 2011. Currently, NASA is using other vehicles, such as SpaceX's Crew Dragon and Boeing's CST-100 Starliner, to transport astronauts to the International Space Station.
The space shuttle currently being used for missions is SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft, which is used for transporting astronauts to and from the International Space Station (ISS) as part of NASA's Commercial Crew Program.
This is a very arbitrary question, as it depends on the size/capabilities of said station. The ISS can carry a crew of seven at a given time. However, a station COULD be constructed to carry a crew of indefinite size.
2
There are currently 6 members aboard. This is expedition 27. There are five men and one woman. See link for more.
Normally, the station has a crew of 6 people, or 3 in between crew rotations. The most people that have ever been aboard the ISS was 10, when the 7-man crew of STS-119 (Space Shuttle Discovery) was docked with the ISS, which had a crew of 3 aboard. Now that the huge Space Shuttle is discontinued, a maximum crew size of 6-8 aboard the ISS is more realistic.
The International Space Station can accommodate a crew of six astronauts for long-duration missions. This crew size is based on factors like available space, life support systems, and operational capabilities of the station. Additional personnel can visit during crew rotations or special missions, but the core crew is generally limited to six members.
experimentseat mealsoperate the stationperform maintenanceetc.
Crew members occupied the first space station built as a multinational cooperative venture in November 1998. This space station was the International Space Station (ISS), a collaboration between multiple countries including the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.