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Vladimir Nikolayevich Dezhurov

 Total EVAs:  9
 Total EVA time:  37h 36m

No. Date Together with Time Main tasks and notes
 1  12.05.1995  G. Strekalov  6h 15m
Preparation work for new setting of solar cells
 2  17.05.1995  G. Strekalov  6h 42m
Changing Kristall solar cell to Kvant1 module
 3  22.05.1995  G. Strekalov  5h 15m
Folding of the second Kristall solar cell
 4  28.05.1995  G. Strekalov  0h 21m
New setting of the docking adapter
 5  01.06.1995  G. Strekalov  0h 23m
New setting of the docking adapter
 6  08.10.2001  M. Tyurin  4h 58m
Using first time the new Russian built airlock and docking port named Pirs, which docked on the Zvezda module since September 2001
 7  15.10.2001  M. Tyurin  5h 52m
Mounting a variety of instruments outside the Zvezda service module
 8  12.11.2001  F. Culbertson  5h 04m
Connecting seven cables between Zvezda service module and Pirs docking module and take photos
 9  03.12.2001  M. Tyurin  2h 46m
Cutting away a rubbery O-ring seal that was preventing an unmanned cargo freighter from properly docking to the complex

Russia and the U.S. define EVA differently. Russian cosmonauts are said to perform EVA any time they are in vacuum in a space suit. A U.S. astronaut must have at least his head outside his spacecraft before he is said to perform an EVA.
In this table, we apply the Russian definition to Russian EVAs, and the U.S. definition to U.S.EVAs.