Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Monday, December 12, 2011
ISS
International Space Station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"ISS" redirects here. For other uses, see ISS (disambiguation).
| The International Space Station on 29 May 2011 as seen from the departing Space Shuttle Endeavour during STS-134 | ||
| ISS Insignia | ||
| Station statistics | ||
|---|---|---|
| COSPAR ID | 1998-067A |
|
| Call sign | Alpha | |
| Crew | 3 Expedition 30 |
|
| Launch | 1998–2012 | |
| Launch pad | Baikonur LC-81/23, LC-1/5 KSC LC-39, |
|
| Mass | approximately 450,000 kg (990,000 lb) | |
| Length | 51 m (167.3 ft)[citation needed] from PMA-2 to Zvezda |
|
| Width | 109 m (357.5 ft)[citation needed] along truss, arrays extended |
|
| Height | c. 20 m (c. 66 ft) nadir–zenith, arrays forward–aft (27 November 2009)[dated info] |
|
| Pressurised volume | 837 m3 (29,600 cu ft) (21 March 2011) |
|
| Atmospheric pressure | 101.3 kPa (29.91 inHg, 1 atm) | |
| Perigee | 376 km (234 mi) AMSL 1 October 2011) |
|
| Apogee | 398 km (247 mi) AMSL 1 October 2011) |
|
| Orbital inclination | 51.6 degrees | |
| Average speed | 7,706.6 m/s (27,743.8 km/h, 17,239.2 mph) |
|
| Orbital period | 91 minutes | |
| Days in orbit | 4771 (13 December) |
|
| Days occupied | 4058 (13 December) |
|
| Number of orbits | 74888 (13 December) |
|
| Orbital decay | 2 km/month | |
| Statistics as of 9 March 2011 (unless noted otherwise) |
||
| References: [1][2][3][4][5][6] | ||
| Configuration | ||
| Station elements as of May 2011 (exploded view) |
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The ISS combines the Japanese Kibō laboratory with three space station projects, the Soviet/Russian Mir-2, the American Freedom, and the European Columbus.[18] Budget constraints led to the merger of these projects into a single multi-national programme. The ISS is a third generation modular space station, comparable to MIR, OPSEK and Tiangong 3, consisting of pressurised modules, external trusses, solar arrays and other components which have been launched by Russian Proton rockets, American Space Shuttles, and Russian Soyuz rockets.[18] The station is maintained in orbit between 278 km (173 mi) and 460 km (286 mi) altitude, and travels at an average ground speed of 27,724 kilometres per hour (17,227 mph), completing 15.7 orbits per day.[19]
The ISS is a joint project between the five participating space agencies, the American NASA, the Russian RKA, the Japanese JAXA, the European ESA, and the Canadian CSA.[20][21] The ownership and use of the space station is established in intergovernmental treaties and agreements[22] which divide the station into two areas and allow the Russian Federation to retain full ownership of Russian Orbital Segment (ROS)/(RS),[23] with the US Orbital Segment (USOS) allocated between the other international partners.[22] The station is serviced by Soyuz spacecraft, Progress spacecraft, the Automated Transfer Vehicle and the H-II Transfer Vehicle,[21] and has been visited by astronauts and cosmonauts from 15 different nations.[24]
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Purpose
According to the original Memorandum of Understanding between NASA and RSA, the International Space Station was intended to be a laboratory, observatory and factory in space. It was also planned to provide transportation, provide servicing and act as a staging base for possible future missions to the Moon, Mars and asteroids.[23] In the 2010 United States National Space Policy, the ISS was given additional roles of serving commercial, diplomatic, and educational purposes.[25][edit] Scientific research
Main article: Scientific research on the ISS
The ISS provides a platform to conduct scientific research that
cannot be performed in any other way. While unmanned spacecraft can
provide platforms for zero gravity and exposure to space, the ISS offers
a long term environment where studies can be performed potentially for
decades, combined with ready access by human researchers over periods
that exceed the capabilities of manned spacecraft.[24][26]
Kibō is intended to accelerate Japan's progress in science and
technology, gain new knowledge and apply it to such fields as industry
and medicine.[27] The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS), which NASA compares to the Hubble telescope,[28] could not be accommodated on a free flying satellite platform, due in part to its power requirements and data bandwidth needs.[29] The Station simplifies individual experiments by eliminating the need for separate rocket launches and research staff.
Expedition 8 Commander and Science Officer Michael Foale conducts an inspection of the Microgravity Science Glovebox.
| This section requires expansion. |
Research on the ISS improves knowledge about the effects of long-term space exposure on the human body, including muscle atrophy, bone loss, and fluid shift. This data will be used to determine whether lengthy human spaceflight and space colonization are feasible. As of 2006, data on bone loss and muscular atrophy suggest that there would be a significant risk of fractures and movement problems if astronauts landed on a planet after a lengthy interplanetary cruise, such as the six-month interval required to travel to Mars.[33][34] Medical studies are conducted aboard the ISS on behalf of the National Space and Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI). Prominent among these is the Advanced Diagnostic Ultrasound in Microgravity study in which astronauts perform ultrasound scans under the guidance of remote experts. The study considers the diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions in space. Usually, there is no physician on board the ISS and diagnosis of medical conditions is a challenge. It is anticipated that remotely guided ultrasound scans will have application on Earth in emergency and rural care situations where access to a trained physician is difficult.[35][36][37]
[edit] Microgravity
A comparison between the combustion of a candle on Earth (left) and in a microgravity environment, such as that found on the ISS (right).
Researchers are investigating the effect of the station's near-weightless environment on the evolution, development, growth and internal processes of plants and animals. In response to some of this data, NASA wants to investigate microgravity's effects on the growth of three-dimensional, human-like tissues, and the unusual protein crystals that can be formed in space.[8]
The investigation of the physics of fluids in microgravity will allow researchers to model the behaviour of fluids better. Because fluids can be almost completely combined in microgravity, physicists investigate fluids that do not mix well on Earth. In addition, an examination of reactions that are slowed by low gravity and temperatures will give scientists a deeper understanding of superconductivity.[8]
The study of materials science is an important ISS research activity, with the objective of reaping economic benefits through the improvement of techniques used on the ground.[39] Other areas of interest include the effect of the low gravity environment on combustion, through the study of the efficiency of burning and control of emissions and pollutants. These findings may improve current knowledge about energy production, and lead to economic and environmental benefits. Future plans are for the researchers aboard the ISS to examine aerosols, ozone, water vapour, and oxides in Earth's atmosphere, as well as cosmic rays, cosmic dust, antimatter, and dark matter in the universe.[8]
[edit] Exploration
The ISS provides a location in the relative safety of Low Earth Orbit to test spacecraft systems that will be required for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars. This provides experience in the maintenance, repair, and replacement of systems on-orbit, which will be essential in operating spacecraft farther from Earth. Mission risks are reduced, and the capabilities of interplanetary spacecraft are advanced.[10] The ESA states that "Whereas the ISS is essential for answering questions concerning the possible impact of weightlessness, radiation and other space-specific factors, other aspects such as the effect of long-term isolation and confinement can be more appropriately addressed via ground-based simulations".[40]
A 3D plan of the experimental complex, including the mock-up of the Martian surface (the brown module).
[edit] Education and cultural outreach
The ISS crew provide opportunities for students on Earth by running student-developed experiments, making educational demonstrations, allowing for student participation in classroom versions of ISS experiments, and directly engaging students using radio, videolink and email.[21][49] ESA offers a wide range of free teaching materials that can be downloaded for use in classrooms.[50] In one lesson, students can navigate a 3-D model of the interior and exterior of the ISS, and face spontaneous challenges to solve in real time.[51]JAXA aims both to 'Stimulate the curiosity of children, cultivating their spirits, and encouraging their passion to pursue craftsmanship', and to 'Heighten the child's awareness of the importance of life and their responsibilities in society.' [52] Through a series of education guides, a deeper understanding of the past and near-term future of manned space flight, as well as that of Earth and life, will be learned.[53][54] In the JAXA Seeds in Space experiments, the mutation effects of spaceflight on plant seeds aboard the ISS is explored. Students grow sunflower seeds which flew on the ISS for about nine months as a start to ‘touch the Universe’. In the first phase of kibo utilization from 2008 to mid-2010, researchers from more than a dozen Japanese universities conducted experiments in diverse fields.[55]
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Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, talks to amateur radio operators on Earth from the Amateur radio workstation in the Zarya
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A student speaks to crew using Amateur Radio, provided free by ARISS.
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First Orbit is a feature-length documentary film about Vostok 1, the first manned space flight around the Earth. By matching the orbit of the International Space Station to that of Vostok 1 as closely as possible, in terms of ground path and time of day, documentary filmmaker Christopher Riley and ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli were able to film the view that Yuri Gagarin saw on his pioneering orbital space flight. This new footage was cut together with the original Vostok 1 mission audio recordings sourced from the Russian State Archive. Nespoli, during Expedition 26/27, filmed the majority of the footage for this documentary film, and as a result is credited as its director of photography.[57] The film was streamed through the website www.firstorbit.org in a global YouTube premiere in 2011, under a free license.[58]
[edit] Sightings
See also: List of satellite pass predictors
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The ISS and HTV photographed using a telescope-mounted camera by Ralf Vandebergh
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A time exposure of a station pass
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Tools are provided by a number of websites such as Heavens-Above as well as smartphone applications that use the known orbital data and the observer's longitude and latitude to predict when the ISS will be visible (weather permitting), where the station will appear to rise to the observer, the altitude above the horizon it will reach and the duration of the pass before the station disappears to the observer either by setting below the horizon or entering into Earth's shadow.[61][62][63][64]
The station is visible from 95% of the inhabited land on Earth, but is not visible from extreme northern or southern latitudes.[65] OPSEK will orbit at a higher inclination of 71 degrees, allowing observation to and from all of the Russian federation.
[edit] Origins
The International Space Station represents a combination of three national space station projects, NASA's Freedom, the RSA's Mir-2, and the European Columbus space stations. In September 1993, American Vice-President Al Gore, Jr., and Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin announced plans for a new space station, which eventually became the International Space Station.[66] They also agreed, in preparation for this new project, that the United States would be involved in the Mir programme, including American Shuttles docking, in the Shuttle-Mir Program.[67] According to the plan, the International Space Station programme would combine the proposed space stations of 3 participant agencies with Canadian robotics and the Japanese Kibō laboratory.[edit] NASA's Freedom
Main article: Space Station Freedom
In the early 1980s, NASA planned to launch a modular space station called Freedom as a counterpart to the Soviet Salyut and Mir space stations.
Although approved by then-president Ronald Reagan and announced in the
1984 State of the Union Address, "We can follow our dreams to distant
stars, living and working in space for peaceful economic and scientific
gain", Freedom was never constructed or completed as originally
designed, and after several cutbacks, the remnants of the project became
part of the ISS. Several NASA Space Shuttle missions in the 1980s and
early 1990s included spacewalks to demonstrate and test space station
construction techniques.NASA's first cost assessment in 1987 revealed the 'Dual Keel' Station would cost $14.5 billion. This caused a political uproar in Congress, and NASA and Reagan Administration officials reached a compromise in March 1987 which allowed the agency to proceed with a cheaper $12.2-billion Phase One Station that could be completed after 10 or 11 Shuttle assembly flights. This design initially omitted the $3.4-billion 'Dual Keel' structure and half of the power generators. The new Space Station configuration was named 'Freedom' by Reagan in June 1988. Originally, Freedom would have carried two 37.5 kW solar arrays. However, Congress quickly insisted on adding two more arrays for scientific users. The Space Station programme was plagued by conflicts during the entire 1984-87 definition phase. In 1987, the Department of Defense (DoD) briefly demanded to have full access to the Station for military research, despite strong objections from NASA and the international partners. Besides the expected furor from the international partners, the DoD position sparked a shouting match between Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and powerful members of Congress that extended right up to the final Fiscal 1988 budget authorization in July 1987.[68] Reagan wanted to invite other NATO countries to participate in the U.S-led project, since the Soviet Union had been launching international crews to their Salyut space stations since 1971. At one point, then-anonymous disgruntled NASA employees calling themselves "Center for Strategic Space Studies" suggested that instead of building Freedom, NASA should take the back-up Skylab from display in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington and launch that.[69]
The space station was also going to tie the emerging European and Japanese national space programmes closer to the U.S.-led project, thereby preventing those nations from becoming major, independent competitors too.[70] An agreement signed in September 1988 allocated 97% of the US lab resources to NASA while the Canadian CSA would receive 3% in return for its contribution to the programme. Europe and Japan would retain 51% of their own laboratory modules. Six Americans and two international astronauts would be permanently based on Space Station Freedom.
[edit] Russia's Mir-2
The Polyus module or spacecraft, which would have served the same function as Zarya, looked like a "Salyut" slightly modified for this task and would have served as the FGB, a foundation which provides propulsion and guidance, but lacks life support. There are two different descriptions of the weapon systems. In one, Polyus is described as a space-borne nuclear bomber, in another it is described as a satellite interceptor, carrying a 1 MegaWatt carbon dioxide laser. The module had a length of almost 37 m and a diameter of 4.1 m weighed nearly 80 t and included 2 principal sections, the smallest, the functional service block (FGB) and the largest, the aim module.[72]
In 1983, the design was changed and the station would consist of Zvezda, followed by several 90 metric ton modules and a truss structure similar to the current station. The draft was approved by NPO Energia Chief Semenov on 14 December 1987 and announced to the press as 'Mir-2' in January 1988. This station would be visited by the Soviet Space Shuttle Buran, but mainly resupplied by Progress-M2 spacecraft. Orbital assembly of the station was expected to begin in 1993.[71] In 1993 with the collapse of the Soviet Union, a redesigned smaller Mir-2 was to be built whilst attached to Mir, just as OPSEK is being assembled whilst attached to the ISS.
[edit] Japan's Kibō
Main articles: Kibō and H-II Transfer Vehicle
Conceived in 1985, the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM) or Kibō
consists of a pressurized laboratory dedicated to advanced technology
experiments, education and art, a cargo bay, an unpressurized pallet for
vacuum experiments in space plus a robotic arm. While the proposed
space station was redesigned many times around Kibō, the only
significant change has been the placement of its ballistic shielding.
Its final position at the front of the station increases the risk of
damage from debris. The Japanese National Space Development Agency
(NASDA) formally submitted the JEM proposal to NASA in March 1986.[70][73][74]In 1986 the Japanese contribution was estimated to be worth $1.9-3.2 billion for a JEM launch in 1995. By 1990, the schedule had slipped by three years due to NASA budget cuts and space station cost overruns. The delays increased the JEM's total cost slightly, from $2.3 billion in 1986 to $2.63 billion in 1993, when the launch was postponed to 1999. Final hardware production began in the mid-1990s and the Japanese robotic arm was tested on a NASA Space Shuttle flight in August 1997. According to plans prior to the Columbia disaster, the JEM would be launched in 2002-03.[75]
In 2010, Kibō won the Good Design Award, a 54 year old consumer and industry award which identifies the best of Japanese craftsmanship.[76] During August 2011, an observatory mounted on Kibō, which utilizes the ISS's orbital motion to image the whole sky in the X-ray spectrum, detected for the first time the moment a star was swallowed by a black hole.[77][78]
[edit] ESA's Columbus
Columbus and Hermes (artist's impression)
The Columbus Man-Tended Free Flyer (MTFF) was a European Space Agency (ESA) programme to develop a space station that could be used for a variety of microgravity experiments while serving ESA's needs for an autonomous manned space platform.[79] The Hermes spaceplane is comparable in function to the American and Soviet Space shuttles, with a smaller crew of up to 6 (reduced to 3 with ejection seats after the Columbia disaster) and substantially smaller cargo capacity, 4,550 kg, comparable to ISS unmanned cargo ships.
By 1991 the Columbus and Hermes pre-development activities were good enough to progress into full development, however profound geopolitical changes prompted examining broader international cooperation, in particular with the Russian Federation. ESA Member States approved the complete development of the Attached Pressurised Module (APM) and the Polar Platform (PPF) for Columbus, but the Man-Tended Free-Flyer (MTFF) was abandoned. The Hermes programme was reoriented into the Manned Space Transportation Programme (MSTP), and a three-year period extending from 1993 to 1995 was agreed on in order to define a future manned space transportation system in cooperation with Russia, including joint development and use of Mir-2.[80][81]
[edit] Station structure
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Expedition 18 commander Michael Fincke's video tour of the habitable part of the ISS from January 2009
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Station layout, photographed from Soyuz TMA-20, with NASA's Endeavour docked.
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Below is a diagram of major station components. The blue areas are pressurized sections accessible by the crew without using spacesuits. The station's unpressurized superstructure is indicated in red. Other unpressurised components are yellow. Note that the Unity node joins directly to the Destiny laboratory. For clarity, they are shown apart.
[edit] Assembly
Main article: Assembly of the International Space Station
See also: List of ISS spacewalks
The assembly of the International Space Station, a major endeavour in space architecture, began in November 1998.[2] Russian modules launch and dock robotically, with the exception of Rassvet. All other modules were delivered by space shuttle, which required installation by ISS and shuttle crewmembers using the SSRMS and EVAs; as of 5 June 2011,
they had added 159 components during more than 1,000 hours of EVA
activity. 127 of these spacewalks originated from the station, while the
remaining 32 were launched from the airlocks of docked space shuttles.[1] The beta angle
of the station had to be considered at all times during construction,
as the station's beta angle is directly related to the percentage of its
orbit that the station (as well as any docked or docking spacecraft) is
exposed to the sun; the space shuttle would not perform optimally above
a limit called the "beta cutoff".[84]
Rassvet was delivered by NASA's Atlantis Space Shuttle in 2010 in
exchange for the Russian Proton delivery of the United States-funded
Russian-built Zarya Module in 1998.[85] Robot arms rather than EVAs were utilized in its installation (docking).The first segment of the ISS, Zarya, was launched on 20 November 1998 on an autonomous Russian Proton rocket. It provided propulsion, orientation control, communications, electrical power, but lacked long-term life support functions. Two weeks later a passive NASA module Unity was launched aboard Space Shuttle flight STS-88 and attached to Zarya by astronauts during EVAs. This module has two Pressurized Mating Adapters (PMAs), one connects permanently to Zarya, the other allows the space shuttle to dock to the space station. At this time, the Russian station Mir was still inhabited. The ISS remained unmanned for two years, during which time Mir was de-orbited. On 12 July 2000 Zvezda was launched into orbit. Preprogrammed commands on board deployed its solar arrays and communications antenna. It then became the passive vehicle for a rendezvous with the Zarya and Unity. As a passive "target" vehicle, the Zvezda maintained a stationkeeping orbit as the Zarya-Unity vehicle performed the rendezvous and docking via ground control and the Russian automated rendezvous and docking system. Zarya's computer transferred control of the station to Zvezda's computer soon after docking. Zvezda added sleeping quarters, a toilet, kitchen, CO2 scrubbers, dehumidifier, oxygen generators, exercise equipment, plus data, voice and television communications with mission control. This enabled permanent habitation of the station.[86][87]
The first resident crew, Expedition 1, arrived in November 2000 on Soyuz TM-31, midway between the flights of STS-92 and STS-97. These two Space Shuttle flights each added segments of the station's Integrated Truss Structure, which provided the station with Ku-band communication for U.S. television, additional attitude support needed for the additional weight of the USOS, and substantial solar arrays supplementing the station's existing 4 solar arrays.[88]
Over the next two years the station continued to expand. A Soyuz-U rocket delivered the Pirs docking compartment. The Space Shuttles Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour delivered the Destiny laboratory and Quest airlock, in addition to the station's main robot arm, the Canadarm2, and several more segments of the Integrated Truss Structure.
The expansion schedule was interrupted by the destruction of the Space Shuttle Columbia on STS-107 in 2003, with the resulting hiatus in the Space Shuttle programme halting station assembly until the launch of Discovery on STS-114 in 2005.[89]
The official resumption of assembly was marked by the arrival of Atlantis, flying STS-115, which delivered the station's second set of solar arrays. Several more truss segments and a third set of arrays were delivered on STS-116, STS-117, and STS-118. As a result of the major expansion of the station's power-generating capabilities, more pressurised modules could be accommodated, and the Harmony node and Columbus European laboratory were added. These were followed shortly after by the first two components of Kibō. In March 2009, STS-119 completed the Integrated Truss Structure with the installation of the fourth and final set of solar arrays. The final section of Kibō was delivered in July 2009 on STS-127, followed by the Russian Poisk module. The third node, Tranquility, was delivered in February 2010 during STS-130 by the Space Shuttle Endeavour, alongside the Cupola, closely followed in May 2010 by the penultimate Russian module, Rassvet, delivered by Space Shuttle Atlantis on STS-132. The last pressurised module of the USOS, Leonardo, was brought to the station by Discovery on her final flight, STS-133, followed by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on STS-134, delivered by Endeavour.[citation needed]
As of June 2011, the station consisted of fifteen pressurised modules and the Integrated Truss Structure. Still to be launched are the Russian Multipurpose Laboratory Module Nauka and a number of external components, including the European Robotic Arm. Assembly is expected to be completed by 2012, by which point the station will have a mass in excess of 400 metric tons (440 short tons).[2][90]
The gross mass of the station is not possible to calculate with precision. The total launch weight of the modules on orbit is 417,289 kg (919,960 lb) (as of 03/09/2011).[91] The weight of experiments, spare parts, personal effects, crew, foodstuff, clothing, propellants, water supplies, gas supplies, docked spacecraft, and other items add to the total mass of the station. Gas (Hydrogen) is constantly vented overboard by the Oxygen generators.
[edit] Pressurised modules
Main article: Assembly sequence
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Unity node (top) and Zarya (with solar panels deployed) in 1998
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From top: Unity, Zarya, Zvezda modules with Progress M1-3 docked closest Earth.
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Zvezda (Russian: Звезда, meaning "star"), DOS-8, also known as the Service Module or SM (Russian: СМ). It provides all of the station's critical systems, its addition rendered the station permanently habitable for the first time, adding life support for up to six crew and living quarters for two. Zvezda's DMS-R computer handles guidance, navigation & control for the entire space station.[92] A second computer which performs the same functions is installed in the Nauka FGB-2. The rocket used for Zvezda's launch was one of the first to carry advertising.[93] The space frame was completed in February 1985, major internal equipment was installed by October 1986, and it was launched on 12 July 2000. Zvezda is at the rear of the station according to its normal direction of travel and orientation, its engines are used to boost the station's orbit. Alternatively Russian and European spacecraft can dock to Zvezda's aft (rear) port and use their engines to boost the station.
Destiny is the primary research facility for United States payloads aboard the ISS. In 2011, NASA solicited proposals for a not-for-profit group to manage all American science on the station which does not relate to manned exploration. The module houses 24 International Standard Payload Racks, some of which are used for environmental systems and crew daily living equipment. Destiny also serves as the mounting point for the station's Truss Structure.[94]
Quest is the only USOS airlock, Quest hosts spacewalks with both United States EMU and Russian Orlan spacesuits. Quest consists of two segments; the equipment lock, that stores spacesuits and equipment, and the crew lock, from which astronauts can exit into space. This module has a separately controlled atmosphere. Crew sleep in this module, breathing a low nitrogen mixture the night before scheduled EVAs, to avoid decompression sickness (known as "the bends") in the low pressure suits.[95]
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Blue EVA hatches in the Pirs airlock frame cosmonaut Maxim Suraev Flight engineer who displays two Orlan space suits
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Thomas Reiter (left), is attired in a liquid
cooling and ventilation garment that complements the EMU style space
suit worn by Jeffrey N. Williams in the Quest Airlock
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Harmony, is the second of the station's node modules and the utility hub of the USOS. The module contains four racks that provide electrical power, bus electronic data, and acts as a central connecting point for several other components via its six Common Berthing Mechanisms (CBMs). The European Columbus and Japanese Kibō laboratories are permanently berthed to two of the radial ports, the other two can used for the HTV. American Shuttle Orbiters docked with the ISS via PMA-2, attached to the forward port. Tranquility is the third and last of the station's U.S. nodes, it contains an additional life support system to recycle waste water for crew use and supplements oxygen generation. Three of the four berthing locations are not used, one has the cupola installed and one has the docking port adapter installed.
Columbus, the primary research facility for European payloads aboard the ISS, provides a generic laboratory as well as facilities specifically designed for biology, biomedical research and fluid physics. Several mounting locations are affixed to the exterior of the module, which provide power and data to external experiments such as the European Technology Exposure Facility (EuTEF), Solar Monitoring Observatory, Materials International Space Station Experiment, and Atomic Clock Ensemble in Space. A number of expansions are planned for the module to study quantum physics and cosmology.[98][99] ESA’s development of technologies on all the main areas of life support has been ongoing for more than 20 years and are/have been used in modules such as Columbus and the ATV.
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Not large enough for crew using spacesuits, the airlock on Kibō has an internal sliding drawer for experiments.
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The Columbus Module in 2008
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Cupola is an observatory, its seven windows are used to make observations of Earth and dock spacecraft. The Cupola project was started by NASA and Boeing, but canceled due to budget cuts. A barter agreement between NASA and the ESA resulted in the Cupola's development being resumed in 1998 by the ESA. The module comes equipped with robotic workstations for operating the station's main robotic arm and shutters to protect its windows from damage caused by micrometeorites. It features a 80-centimetre (31 in) round window, the largest window on the station.
Leonardo PPM The three NASA Space shuttle MPLM cargo containers Leonardo, Raffaello and Donatello, were built for NASA in Turin, Italy by Alcatel Alenia Space, now Thales Alenia Space.[103] The MPLMs are provided to the ISS programme by the Italy (independent of Italy's role as a member state of ESA) to NASA and are considered to be U.S. elements. In a bartered exchange for providing these containers, the U.S. has given Italy research time aboard the ISS out of the U.S. allotment in addition to that which Italy receives as a member of ESA.[104] The Permanent Multipurpose Module was created by converting Leonardo into a module that could be permanently attached to the station. [105][106][107]
[edit] Scheduled additional modules
Nauka (Russian: Нау́ка; lit. Science), also known as the Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM) or FGB-2, (Russian: Многофункциональный лабораторный модуль, or МЛМ), is the major Russian laboratory module. This module will be separated from the ISS before de-orbit with support modules and become the OPSEK space station, it contains an additional set of life support systems and orientation control, and power provided by its solar arrays will mean the ROS no longer relies on power from the USOS main arrays. Nauka's mission has changed over time, during the mid 1990's it was intended as a backup for the FGB, and later as a universal docking module (UDM), its docking ports will be able to support automatic docking of both space craft, additional modules and fuel transfer. Prior to the arrival of the MLM, a progress robot spacecraft will dock with PIRS, depart with that module, and both will be discarded. Nauka will then use its own engines to attach itself to the ROS in 2012.[citation needed]Node Module (UM)/(NM) This 4-ton ball shaped module will support the docking of two scientific and power modules during the final stage of the station assembly and provide the Russian segment additional docking ports to receive Soyuz TMA (transportation modified anthropometric) and Progress M spacecraft. NM is to be incorporated into the ISS in 2012. It will be integrated with a special version of the Progress cargo ship and launched by a standard Soyuz rocket. The Progress would use its own propulsion and flight control system to deliver and dock the Node Module to the nadir (Earth-facing) docking port of the Nauka MLM/FGB-2 module. One port is equipped with an active hybrid docking port, which enables docking with the MLM module. The remaining five ports are passive hybrids, enabling docking of Soyuz and Progress vehicles, as well as heavier modules and future spacecraft with modified docking systems. However more importantly, the node module was conceived to serve as the only permanent element of the future Russian successor to the ISS, OPSEK. Equipped with six docking ports, the Node Module would serve as a single permanent core of the future station with all other modules coming and going as their life span and mission required.[108][109] This would be a progression beyond the ISS and Russia's modular MIR space station, which are in turn more advanced than early monolithic first generation stations such as Skylab, and early Salyut and Almaz stations.
Science Power Modules 1 & 2 (NEM-1, NEM-2) (Russian: Научно-Энергетический Модуль-1 и -2)
[edit] Cancelled components
The US Habitation Module would have served as the station's living quarters. Instead, the sleep stations are now spread throughout the station.[110] The US Interim Control Module and ISS Propulsion Module were intended to replace functions of Zvezda in case of a launch failure.[111] The Russian Universal Docking Module, to which the cancelled Russian Research modules and spacecraft would have docked.[112] The Russian Science Power Platform would have provided the Russian Orbital Segment with a power supply independent of the ITS solar arrays,[112] and two Russian Research Modules that were planned to be used for scientific research.[113][edit] Unpressurised elements
The ISS features a large number of external components that do not require pressurization. The largest such component is the Integrated Truss Structure (ITS), to which the station's main solar arrays and thermal radiators are mounted.[114] The ITS consists of ten separate segments forming a structure 108.5 m (356 ft) long.[2]The station in its complete form has several smaller external components, such as the six robotic arms, the three External Stowage Platforms (ESPs) and four ExPrESS Logistics Carriers (ELCs).[90][115] Whilst these platforms allow experiments (including MISSE, the STP-H3 and the Robotic Refuelling Mission) to be deployed and conducted in the vacuum of space by providing electricity and processing experimental data locally, the platforms' primary function is to store Orbital Replacement Units (ORUs). ORUs are spare parts that can be replaced when the item either passes its design life or fails. Examples of ORUs include pumps, storage tanks, antennas and battery units. Such units are replaced either by astronauts during EVA or by robotic arms. While spare parts were routinely transported to and from the station via space shuttle resupply missions, there was a heavy emphasis on ORU transport once the NASA Shuttle approached retirement. Several shuttle missions were dedicated to the delivery of ORUs, including STS-129,[116] STS-133[117] and STS-134.[118] To date only one other mode of transportation of ORUs has been utilised – the Japanese cargo vessel HTV-2 – which delivered an FHRC and CTC-2 via its Exposed Pallet (EP).[119]
There are also smaller exposure facilities mounted directly to laboratory modules; the JEM Exposed Facility serves as an external 'porch' for the Japanese Experiment Module complex,[120] and a facility on the European Columbus laboratory provides power and data connections for experiments such as the European Technology Exposure Facility[121][122] and the Atomic Clock Ensemble in Space.[123] A remote sensing instrument, SAGE III-ISS, is due to be delivered to the station in 2014 aboard a Dragon capsule.[124] The largest such scientific payload externally mounted to the ISS is the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS), a particle physics experiment, was launched on STS-134 in May 2011, and mounted externally on the ITS. The AMS measures cosmic rays to look for evidence of dark matter and antimatter.[125]
[edit] Cranes and robotic arms
The largest robotic arm on the ISS, Canadarm2 has a mass of 1,800 kilograms and is used to dock and manipulate spacecraft and modules on the USOS, and hold crew members and equipment during EVAs. The ROS does not require spacecraft or modules to be manipulated, as all spacecraft and modules dock automatically, and may be discarded the same way. Crew use the 2 Strela (Russian: Стрела; lit. Arrow) cargo cranes during EVAs for moving crew and equipment around the ROS. Each Strela crane has a mass of 45 kg. The Russian and Japanese laboratories both have airlocks and robotic arms.
Dextre, like many of the stations experiments and robotic arms, can be operated from Earth and perform tasks while the crew sleeps.
The European Robotic Arm, which will service the Russian Orbital Segment, will be launched alongside the Multipurpose Laboratory Module in 2012.[128] The Japanese Experiment Module's Remote Manipulator System (JFM RMS), which services the JEM Exposed Facility,[129] was launched on STS-124 and is attached to the JEM Pressurised Module.[130]
[edit] Station systems
[edit] Life support
Main articles: ISS ECLSS and Chemical oxygen generator
The critical systems are the atmosphere control system, the water
supply system, the food supply facilities, the sanitation and hygiene
equipment, and fire detection and suppression equipment. The Russian
orbital segment's life support systems are contained in the Service
Module Zvezda. Some of these systems are supplemented by equipment in
the USOS. The MLM Nauka laboratory has a complete set of life support
systems.[edit] Atmospheric control systems
The atmosphere on board the ISS is similar to the Earth's.[131] Normal air pressure on the ISS is 101.3 kPa (14.7 psi);[132] the same as at sea level on Earth. An Earth-like atmosphere offers benefits for crew comfort, and is much safer than the alternative, a pure oxygen atmosphere, because of the increased risk of a fire such as that responsible for the deaths of the Apollo 1 crew.[133] Earth-like atmospheric conditions have been maintained on all Russian spacecraft.[134]Part of the ROS atmosphere control system is the oxygen supply, triple-redundancy is provided by the Elektron unit, solid fuel generators, and stored oxygen. The Elektron unit is the primary oxygen supply, O2 and H2 are produced by electrolysis, with the H2 being vented overboard. The 1 kW system uses approximately 1 liter of water per crew member per day from stored water from Earth, or water recycled from other systems. MIR was the first spacecraft to use recycled water for oxygen production. The secondary oxygen supply is provided by burning O2 producing Vika cartridges. Each 'candle' takes 5–20 minutes to decompose at 450–500 °C, producing 600 liters of O2, this unit is manually operated.[137]
The US orbital segment has redundant supplies of oxygen, from a pressurized storage tank on the Quest airlock module delivered in 2001, supplemented ten years later by ESA built Advanced Closed-Loop System (ACLS) in the Tranquility module (Node 3), which produces O2 by electrolysis.[138] Hydrogen produced is combined with Carbon dioxide from the cabin atmosphere and converted to water and methane.
[edit] Food
Most of the food eaten by station crews is stored frozen, refrigerated or canned. Menus are prepared by the astronauts, with the help of a dietitian, before the astronauts' flight to the station.[139] As the sense of taste is reduced in orbit because of fluid shifting to the head, spicy food is a favourite of many crews.[140] Each crewmember has individual food packages and cooks them using the onboard galley, which features two food warmers, a refrigerator, and a water dispenser that provides both heated and unheated water.[141] Drinks are provided in dehydrated powder form and are mixed with water before consumption.[139][141] Drinks and soups are sipped from plastic bags with straws, while solid food is eaten with a knife and fork, which are attached to a tray with magnets to prevent them from floating away. Any food that does float away, including crumbs, must be collected to prevent it from clogging up the station's air filters and other equipment.[139][edit] Hygiene
The ISS does not feature a shower, although it was planned as part of the now cancelled Habitation Module. Instead, crewmembers wash using a water jet and wet wipes, with soap dispensed from a toothpaste tube-like container. Crews are also provided with rinseless shampoo and edible toothpaste to save water.[142]There are two space toilets on the ISS, both of Russian design, located in Zvezda and Tranquility.[141] These Waste and Hygiene Compartments use a fan-driven suction system similar to the Space Shuttle Waste Collection System. Astronauts first fasten themselves to the toilet seat, which is equipped with spring-loaded restraining bars to ensure a good seal.[140] A lever operates a powerful fan and a suction hole slides open: the air stream carries the waste away. Solid waste is collected in individual bags which are stored in an aluminium container. Full containers are transferred to Progress spacecraft for disposal.[141][143] Liquid waste is evacuated by a hose connected to the front of the toilet, with anatomically correct "urine funnel adapters" attached to the tube so both men and women can use the same toilet. Waste is collected and transferred to the Water Recovery System, where it is recycled back into drinking water.[139]
[edit] Power supply
Double-sided solar, or Photovoltaic arrays, provide electrical power for the ISS. These bifacial cells are more efficient and operate at a lower temperature than single-sided cells commonly used on Earth, by collecting sunlight on one side and light reflected off the Earth on the other.[144]The Russian segment of the station, like the space shuttle and most spacecraft, uses 28 volt DC from four rotating solar arrays mounted on Zarya and Zvezda. The USOS uses 130–180 V DC from the USOS PV array.[114]
The USOS solar arrays are arranged as four wing pairs, with each wing producing nearly 32.8 kW.[114] These arrays normally track the sun to maximise power generation. Each array is about 375 m2 (450 yd2) in area and 58 metres (63 yd) long. In the complete configuration, the solar arrays track the sun by rotating the alpha gimbal once per orbit while the beta gimbal follows slower changes in the angle of the sun to the orbital plane. The Night Glider mode aligns the solar arrays parallel to the ground at night to reduce the significant aerodynamic drag at the station's relatively low orbital altitude.[145]
The station uses rechargeable nickel-hydrogen batteries (NiH2) for continuous power during the 35 minutes of every 90 minute orbit that it is eclipsed by the Earth. The batteries are recharged on the day side of the Earth. They have a 6.5 year lifetime (over 37,000 charge/discharge cycles) and will be regularly replaced over the anticipated 20-year life of the station.[146] In the USOS, power is stabilised and distributed at 160 V DC and converted to the user-required 124 V DC. The higher distribution voltage allows smaller, lighter conductors, at the expense of crew safety. The ROS uses low voltage. The two station segments share power with converters.
The station's large solar panels generate a high potential voltage difference between the station and the ionosphere. This could cause arcing through insulating surfaces and sputtering of conductive surfaces as ions are accelerated by the spacecraft plasma sheath. To mitigate this, plasma contactor units (PCU)s create current paths between the station and the ambient plasma field.[147]
[edit] Thermal Control System
Main article: External Active Thermal Control System
The large amount of electrical power consumed by the station's
systems and experiments is turned almost entirely into heat. The heat
which can be dissipated through the walls of the stations modules is
insufficient to keep the internal ambient temperature within
comfortable, workable limits. Ammonia is continuously pumped through
pipework throughout the station to collect heat, and then into external
radiators exposed to the cold of space, and back into the station.The International Space Station (ISS) External Active Thermal Control System (EATCS) maintains an equilibrium when the ISS environment or heat loads exceed the capabilities of the Passive Thermal Control System (PTCS). Note Elements of the PTCS are external surface materials, insulation such as MLI, or Heat Pipes. The EATCS provides heat rejection capabilities for all the US pressurised modules, including the JEM and COF as well as the main power distribution electronics of the S0, S1 and P1 Trusses. The EATCS consists of two independent Loops (Loop A & Loop B), they both use mechanically pumped Ammonia in fluid state, in closed-loop circuits. The EATCS is capable of rejecting up to 70 kW, and provides a substantial upgrade in heat rejection capacity from the 14 kW capability of the Early External Active Thermal Control System (EEATCS) via the Early Ammonia Servicer (EAS), which was launched on STS-105 and installed onto the P6 Truss.[148]
[edit] Communications & computers
Main articles: Tracking and Data Relay Satellite and Luch (satellite)
See also: ThinkPad use in space
Radio communications provide telemetry and scientific data links between the station and Mission Control Centres. Radio links are also used during rendezvous and docking procedures
and for audio and video communication between crewmembers, flight
controllers and family members. As a result, the ISS is equipped with
internal and external communication systems used for different purposes.[149]The Russian Orbital Segment communicates directly with the ground via the Lira antenna mounted to Zvezda.[21][150] The Lira antenna also has the capability to use the Luch data relay satellite system.[21] This system, used for communications with Mir, fell into disrepair during the 1990s, and as a result is no longer in use,[21][151][152] although two new Luch satellites—Luch-5A and Luch-5B—are planned for launch in 2011 to restore the operational capability of the system.[153] Another Russian communications system is the Voskhod-M, which enables internal telephone communications between Zvezda, Zarya, Pirs, Poisk and the USOS, and also provides a VHF radio link to ground control centres via antennas on Zvezda's exterior.[154]
The US Orbital Segment (USOS) makes use of two separate radio links mounted in the Z1 truss structure: the S band (used for audio) and Ku band (used for audio, video and data) systems. These transmissions are routed via the United States Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS) in geostationary orbit, which allows for almost continuous real-time communications with NASA's Mission Control Center (MCC-H) in Houston.[18][21][149] Data channels for the Canadarm2, European Columbus laboratory and Japanese Kibō modules are routed via the S band and Ku band systems, although the European Data Relay Satellite System and a similar Japanese system will eventually complement the TDRSS in this role.[18][155] Communications between modules are carried on an internal digital wireless network.[156]
UHF radio is used by astronauts and cosmonauts conducting EVAs. UHF is employed by other spacecraft that dock to or undock from the station, such as Soyuz, Progress, HTV, ATV and the Space Shuttle (except the shuttle also makes use of the S band and Ku band systems via TDRSS), to receive commands from Mission Control and ISS crewmembers.[21] Automated spacecraft are fitted with their own communications equipment; the ATV uses a laser attached to the spacecraft and equipment attached to Zvezda, known as the Proximity Communications Equipment, to accurately dock to the station.[157][158]
The ISS is equipped with approximately 100 IBM and Lenovo ThinkPad model A31 and T61P laptop computers. Each computer is a commercial off-the-shelf purchase which is then modified for safety and operation including updates to connectors, cooling and power to accommodate the station's 28V DC power system and weightless environment. Laptops aboard the ISS are connected to the station's wireless LAN via Wi-Fi and are connected to the ground at 3 Mbit/s up and 10 Mbit/s down, comparable to home DSL connection speeds.[159]
[edit] Station operations
[edit] Docking
Space Shuttle Endeavour, ATV-2, Soyuz TMA-21 and Progress M-10M docked to the ISS during STS-134, as seen from the departing Soyuz TMA-20
The American Manual approach to docking allows greater initial flexibility and less complexity. The downside to this mode of operation is that each mission becomes unique and requires specialized training and planning, making the process more labor-intensive and expensive. The Russians pursued an automated methodology that used the crew in override or monitoring roles. Although the initial development costs were high, the system has become very reliable with standardizations that provide significant cost benefits in repetitive routine operations.[163] The Russian approach allows assembly of space stations orbiting other worlds in preparation for manned missions. The Nauka module of the ISS will be used in the 12th Russian(/Soviet) space station, OPSEK, whose main goal is supporting manned deep space exploration.
Dmitri Kondratyev and Paolo Nespoli seen in the Cupola. Background left to right, Progress M-09M, Soyuz TMA-20, the Leonardo module and HTV-2.
From 26 February 2011 to 7 March 2011 four of the governmental partners (United States, ESA, Japan and Russia) had their spacecraft (NASA Shuttle, ATV, HTV, Progress and Soyuz) docked at the ISS, the only time this has happened to date.[168]
[edit] Currently docked
| Spacecraft | Mission | Docking port | Docked (UTC) | Undocking (UTC) | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Progress M-13M | Progress 45 Cargo | Pirs | 2 November 2011 11:41 | 25 January 2012 | [169] | |
| Soyuz TMA-22 | Expedition 29/30 | Poisk | 16 November 2011 05:24 | [170] |
[edit] Scheduled launches and dockings
As of 9 March 2011, there have been 25 Soyuz, 41 Progress, 2 ATV, 2 HTV and 35 space shuttle flights to the station.[1]All dates are UTC. Dates are the earliest possible dates and may change. Forward ports are at the front of the station according to its normal direction of travel and orientation (attitude). Aft is at the rear of the station, used by spacecraft boosting the station's orbit. Nadir is closest the Earth, Zenith is on top.
| Spacecraft | Launch | Mission | Planned docking | Docking port | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soyuz TMA-03M | 21 December 2011 | Expedition 30/31 | 23 December 2011 | Rassvet | ||
| Dragon C2 | 7 February 2012 | Dragon Demo | TBD | Harmony nadir | [171] | |
| Progress M-14M | TBD | Progress 46 Cargo | TBD | Pirs | [172] | |
| White Stork 3 | 18 February 2012 | HTV-3 Cargo | 23 February 2012 | Harmony | ||
| Edoardo Amaldi | 7 March 2012 | ATV-3 Cargo | 15 March 2012 | Zvezda aft | [173] | |
| Soyuz TMA-04M | 30 March 2012 | Expedition 31/32 | TBD | Poisk | [172] | |
| Progress M-15M | 25 April 2012 | Progress 45 Cargo | TBD | Pirs | ||
| Proton | May 2012 | Module Nauka MLM | May 2012 | [174] | ||
| Dragon CRS1 | 10 July 2012 | Dragon 1 Cargo | TBD | TBD | [175] | |
| Progress M-16M | 25 July 2012 | Progress 48 Cargo | TBD | Pirs | ||
| Cygnus CRS1 | 2 October 2012 | Cygnus 1 Cargo | TBD | Harmony nadir | ||
| Progress M-UM with Soyuz-2.1b | 2012 | Module Node Module (UM) | 2012 | |||
| Proton-M (or Angara A5) | 2014 | Module NEM-1 | 2014 | |||
| Proton-M (or Angara A5) | 2015 | Module NEM-2 | 2015 |
[edit] Expeditions
Each permanent crew is given an expedition number. Expeditions have an average duration of half a year, and they commence following the official handover of the station from one Expedition commander to another. Expeditions 1 through 6 consisted of three person crews, but the Columbia accident led to a reduction to two crew members for Expeditions 7 to 12. Expedition 13 saw the restoration of the station crew to at least three. Several expeditions, such as Expedition 16, have consisted of up to six Crew members, who are flown to and from the station on separate flights.[176][177] When crew size was increased to six in 2010, space tourism was halted until 2013.[178] With the arrival of the American Commercial Crew vehicles in the middle of the 2010s, expedition size may be increased to seven crew members, the number ISS is designed for.[179]The International Space Station is the most-visited spacecraft in the history of space flight. As of 15 December 2010, it had received 297 visitors (196 different people).[24][180] Mir had 137 visitors (104 different people).[151]
[edit] Work
A typical day for the crew begins with a wake-up at 06:00, followed by post-sleep activities and a morning inspection of the station. The crew then eats breakfast and takes part in a daily planning conference with Mission Control before starting work at around 08:10. The first scheduled exercise of the day follows, after which the crew continues work until 13:05. Following a one-hour lunch break, the afternoon consists of more exercise and work before the crew carries out its pre-sleep activities beginning at 19:30, including dinner and a crew conference. The scheduled sleep period begins at 21:30. In general, the crew works ten hours per day on a weekday, and five hours on Saturdays, with the rest of the time their own for relaxation or work catch-up.[181]The station provides crew quarters for each member of the expedition's crew, with two 'sleep stations' in the Zvezda and four more installed in Harmony.[182][183] The American quarters are private, approximately person-sized soundproof booths. The Russian crew quarters include a small window, but do not provide the same amount of ventilation or block the same amount of noise as their American counterparts. A crewmember can sleep in a crew quarter in a tethered sleeping bag, listen to music, use a laptop, and store personal items in a large drawer or in nets attached to the module's walls. The module also provides a reading lamp, a shelf and a desktop.[139][140][141] Visiting crews have no allocated sleep module, and attach a sleeping bag to an available space on a wall—it is possible to sleep floating freely through the station, but this is generally avoided because of the possibility of bumping into sensitive equipment.[142] It is important that crew accommodations be well ventilated; otherwise, astronauts can wake up oxygen-deprived and gasping for air, because a bubble of their own exhaled carbon dioxide has formed around their heads.[140]
[edit] Mission control centres
See also: Mission Control Center
The components of the ISS are operated and monitored by their
respective space agencies at control centres across the globe,
including:- Roskosmos's Mission Control Center at Korolyov, Moscow Oblast, controls the Russian Orbital Segment which handles Guidance, Navigation & Control for the entire Station.,[92][184] in addition to individual Soyuz and Progress missions.[21]
- ESA's ATV Control Centre, at the Toulouse Space Centre (CST) in Toulouse, France, controls flights of the unmanned European Automated Transfer Vehicle.[21]
- JAXA's JEM Control Centre and HTV Control Centre at Tsukuba Space Centre (TKSC) in Tsukuba, Japan, are responsible for operating the Japanese Experiment Module complex and all flights of the 'White Stork' HTV Cargo spacecraft, respectively.[21]
- NASA's Mission Control Center at Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, serves as the primary control facility for the United States segment of the ISS and also controls the Space Shuttle missions that visit the station.[21]
- NASA's Payload Operations and Integration Center at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, coordinates payload operations in the USOS.[21]
- ESA's Columbus Control Centre at the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, manages the European Columbus research laboratory.[21]
- CSA's MSS Control at Saint-Hubert, Quebec, Canada, controls and monitors the Mobile Servicing System, or Canadarm2.[21]
[edit] Orbit
The ISS is maintained in a nearly circular orbit with a minimum mean altitude of 278 km (173 mi) and a maximum of 460 km (286 mi), in the centre of the Thermosphere, at an inclination of 51.6 degrees to Earth's equator, necessary to ensure that Russian Soyuz and Progress spacecraft launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome may be safely launched to reach the station. Spent rocket stages must be dropped into uninhabited areas and this limits the directions rockets can be launched from the spaceport.[65][185] The orbital inclination chosen was also low enough to allow American shuttles launched from Houston to reach the ISS.It travels at an average speed of 27,724 kilometres (17,227 mi) per hour, and completes 15.7 orbits per day.[19] The station's altitude was allowed to fall around the time of each NASA shuttle mission. Orbital boost burns would generally be delayed until after the shuttle's departure. This allowed shuttle payloads to be lifted with the station's engines during the routine firings, rather than have the shuttle lift itself and the payload together to a higher orbit. This trade-off allowed heavier loads to be transferred to the station. After the retirement of the NASA shuttle, the nominal orbit of the space station was raised in altitude.[186] Other, more frequent supply ships don't require this adjustment as they are substantially lighter vehicles.[26][187]
Orbital boosting can be performed by the station's two main engines on the Zvezda service module, or Russian and American spacecraft docket to Zvezda's aft port. The ATV has been designed with the possibility of adding a second docking port to its other end, allowing it to remain at the ISS and still allow other craft to dock and boost the station. It takes approximately two orbits (three hours) for the boost to a higher altitude to be completed.[187] In December 2008 NASA signed an agreement with the Ad Astra Rocket Company which may result in the testing on the ISS of a VASIMR plasma propulsion engine.[188] This technology could allow station-keeping to be done more economically than at present.[189][190]
The Russian orbital segment handles Guidance, Navigation & Control for the entire Station.[92] Initially, Zarya, the first module of the station, controlled the station until a short time after the Russian service module Zvezda docked and was transferred control. Zvezda contains the ESA built DMS-R Data Management System.[184] Zvezda computes the station's position and orbital trajectory using redundant Earth horizon sensors, Sun and Solar horizon sensors, and star trackers. The USOS and ROS both have experimental position sensing equipment, which use the GPS and Russian GLONASS systems. Amongst the problems with these experimental systems are the stations path and speed. GPS was not initially designed for orbital navigation and high speed (25,000 km/h). Once, during Expedition 10,[191] an incorrect command was sent to the station's computer, and the CMG system became 'saturated' (when the set of CMGs exceed their operational range or cannot track a series of rapid movements[192]) Attitude control was automatically taken over by the Russian Attitude Control System thrusters for about one orbit, using about 14 kilograms of propellant before the fault was noticed and fixed. Thrusters are deactivated during EVAs for crew safety. When a space shuttle or Soyuz is docked to the station, it can also be used to maintain station attitude such as for troubleshooting. Shuttle control was used exclusively during installation of the S3/S4 truss, which provides electrical power and data interfaces for the station's electronics.[193]
[edit] Safety aspects
See also: Astrobiology and Extremophile
The space environment is hostile to life. Unprotected presence in
space is characterised by an intense radiation field (consisting
primarily of protons and other subatomic charged particles from the solar wind, in addition to cosmic rays), high vacuum, extreme temperatures, and microgravity.[194] Some simple forms of life[195] including Tardigrades[196] can survive in this environment in a desiccated state.[edit] Radiation
The ISS is partially protected from the space environment by the Earth's magnetic field. From an average distance of about 70,000 km, depending on Solar activity, the magnetosphere begins to deflect solar wind around the Earth and ISS. However, solar flares are still a hazard to the crew, who may receive only a few minutes warning. The crew of Expedition 10 took shelter as a precaution in 2005 in a more heavily shielded part of the ROS designed for this purpose during the initial 'proton storm' of an X-3 class solar flare.[197][198]Without the protection of the Earth's atmosphere, astronauts are exposed to higher levels of radiation from a steady flux of cosmic rays. Subatomic charged particles, primarily protons from solar wind, penetrate living tissue and damage DNA. The station's crews are exposed to about 1 millisievert of radiation each day, which is about the same as someone would get in a year on Earth, from natural sources.[199] This results in a higher risk of astronauts' developing cancer. High levels of radiation can cause damage to the chromosomes of lymphocytes. These cells are central to the immune system and so any damage to them could contribute to the lowered immunity experienced by astronauts. Over time lowered immunity results in the spread of infection between crew members, especially in such confined areas. Radiation has also been linked to a higher incidence of cataracts in astronauts. Protective shielding and protective drugs may lower the risks to an acceptable level, but data is scarce and longer-term exposure will result in greater risks.[33]
Despite efforts to improve radiation shielding on the ISS compared to previous stations such as Mir, radiation levels within the station have not been vastly reduced, and it is thought that further technological advancement will be required to make long-duration human spaceflight further into the Solar System a possibility.[199] Large, acute doses of radiation from coronal mass ejections can cause radiation sickness and can be fatal. Without the protection of the Earth's magnetosphere, interplanetary manned missions are especially vulnerable.
The radiation levels experienced on ISS are about 5 times greater than those experienced by airline passengers and crew. The Earth's electromagnetic field provides almost the same level of protection against solar and other radiation in low Earth orbit as in the stratosphere. Airline passengers, however, experience this level of radiation for no more than 15 hours for the longest intercontinental flights. For example, on a 12 hour flight an airline passenger would experience 0.1 millisievert of radiation, or a rate of 0.2 millisieverts per day; only 1/5 the rate experienced by an astronaut in LEO.[200]
[edit] Crew health
Astronaut Frank De Winne is attached to the TVIS treadmill with bungee cords aboard the International Space Station
To prevent some of these adverse physiological effects, the station is equipped with two treadmills (including the COLBERT), the aRED (advanced Resistive Exercise Device) which enables various weightlifting exercises, and a stationary bicycle; each astronaut spends at least two hours per day exercising on the equipment.[140][141] Astronauts use bungee cords to strap themselves to the treadmill.[201] Researchers believe that exercise is a good countermeasure for the bone and muscle density loss that occurs when humans live for a long time without gravity.[202]
[edit] Orbital debris
Main article: space debris
Example of risk management: A NASA model showing areas at high risk from impact for the International Space Station.
[edit] Repairs
Main article: International Space Station maintenance
Unexpected problems and failures have impacted the station's assembly
time-line and work schedules leading to periods of reduced capabilities
and, in some cases, could have forced abandonment of the station for
safety reasons, had these problems not been resolved.In 2009, the engines on Zvezda were issued an incorrect command which caused resonant vibrations to propagate throughout the station structure which persisted for over two minutes.[220] While no damage to the station was immediately reported, some components may have been stressed beyond their design limits. Further analysis confirmed that the station was unlikely to have suffered any structural damage, and it appears that "structures will still meet their normal lifetime capability".[221] 2009 also saw damage to the S1 radiator, one of the components of the station's cooling system. The problem was first noticed in Soyuz imagery in September 2008, but was not thought to be serious.[222] The imagery showed that the surface of one sub-panel has peeled back from the underlying central structure, possibly due to micro-meteoroid or debris impact. It is also known that a Service Module thruster cover, jettisoned during an EVA in 2008, had struck the S1 radiator, but its effect, if any, has not been determined. On 15 May 2009 the damaged radiator panel's ammonia tubing was mechanically shut off from the rest of the cooling system by the computer-controlled closure of a valve. The same valve was used immediately afterwards to vent the ammonia from the damaged panel, eliminating the possibility of an ammonia leak from the cooling system via the damaged panel.[222]
Early on 1 August 2010, a failure in cooling Loop A (starboard side), one of two external cooling loops, left the station with only half of its normal cooling capacity and zero redundancy in some systems.[223][224][225] The problem appeared to be in the ammonia pump module that circulates the ammonia cooling fluid. Several subsystems, including two of the four CMGs, were shut down.
Planned operations on the ISS were interrupted through a series of EVAs to address the cooling system issue. A first EVA on 7 August 2010, to replace the failed pump module, was not fully completed due to an ammonia leak in one of four quick-disconnects. A second EVA on 11 August successfully removed the failed pump module.[226][227] A third EVA was required to restore Loop A to normal functionality.[228][229]
The USOS's cooling system is largely built by the American company Boeing,[230] which is also the manufacturer of the failed pump.[231]
An air leak from the USOS in 2004,[232] the venting of fumes from an Elektron oxygen generator in 2006,[233] and the failure of the computers in the ROS in 2007 during STS-117 which left the station without thruster, Elektron, Vozdukh and other environmental control system operations, the root cause of which was found to be condensation inside the electrical connectors leading to a short-circuit.[citation needed]
[edit] Politics
Main article: International Space Station program
[edit] International co-operation
International co-operation in space began in the early 1970s with the docking of Soyuz 19 and Apollo 18, known in the US as the Apollo-Soyuz programme, and in the USSR as the Soyuz-Apollo programme. From 1978–1987 the USSR's Interkosmos programme included allied Warsaw Pact countries, and countries which were not Soviet allies, such as India, Syria and France, in manned and unmanned missions to Space stations Salyut 6 and 7. In 1986 the USSR extended this co-operation to a dozen countries in the MIR programme. In 1994–98 NASA space shuttles and crew visited MIR in the Shuttle-Mir programme. In 1998 the ISS programme began.Ownership of modules, station utilization by participant nations, and responsibilities for station resupply are established by the Space Station Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA). This international treaty was signed on 28 January 1998 by the primary nations involved in the Space Station project; the United States of America, Russia, Japan, Canada and eleven member states of the European Space Agency (Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom).[20][22] A second layer of agreements was then achieved, called Memoranda of Understanding (MOU), between NASA and ESA, CSA, RKA and JAXA. These agreements are then further split, such as for the contractual obligations between nations, and trading of partners' rights and obligations.[22] Use of the Russian Orbital Segment is also negotiated at this level.[23]
Allocation of US Orbital Segment hardware utilisation between nations
The Russian part of the station is operated and controlled by the Russian Federation's space agency and provides Russia with the right to nearly one-half of the crew time for the ISS. The allocation of remaining crew time (three to four crew members of the total permanent crew of six) and hardware within the other sections of the station is as follows: Columbus: 51% for the ESA, 46.7% for NASA, and 2.3% for CSA.[22] Kibō: 51% for the JAXA, 46.7% for NASA, and 2.3% for CSA.[155] Destiny: 97.7% for NASA and 2.3% for CSA.[243] Crew time, electrical power and rights to purchase supporting services (such as data upload and download and communications) are divided 76.6% for NASA, 12.8% for JAXA, 8.3% for ESA, and 2.3% for CSA.[22][90][155][243] [151]
[edit] China
China is not an ISS partner, and no Chinese nationals have been aboard. China has its own contemporary manned space program, project 921, and collaborates with Russia, the European Union (EU), Brazil, Canada, Nigeria, and others in manned and unmanned space projects. China is excluded from the ISS partnership by the United States. China has publicly pushed for more dialogue and joint activities, but American mistrust of Chinese space intentions grew in the mid-1990s when U.S. companies were accused of transferring potentially sensitive military information to China. Since then, cooperation has stagnated, in 2011 new legislation further strengthened legal barriers to co-operation, preventing NASA co-operation with China or Chinese owned companies, even the expenditure of funds used to host Chinese visitors at NASA facilities, unless specifically authorized by new laws.[244]China's Shenzhou modules have been designed to dock at the International Space Station if that becomes politically feasible in the future.[245] ESA publically states it is ready to invite China to the ISS, but this needs to be a collective decision by all the current partners.[41]
[edit] End of mission
According to a 2009 report, RKK Energia is considering methods to remove from the station some modules of the Russian Orbital Segment when the end of mission is reached and use them as a basis for a new station, known as the Orbital Piloted Assembly and Experiment Complex (OPSEK). The modules under consideration for removal from the current ISS include the Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM), currently scheduled to be launched in May 2012, with other Russian modules which are currently planned to be attached to the MLM until 2015. Neither the MLM nor any additional modules attached to it would have reached the end of their useful lives in 2016 or 2020. The report presents a statement from an unnamed Russian engineer who believes that, based on the experience from Mir, a thirty-year life should be possible, except for micrometeorite damage, because the Russian modules have been built with on-orbit refurbishment in mind.[246]According to the Outer Space Treaty the United States is legally responsible for all modules it has launched.[247] In ISS planning, NASA examined options including returning the station to Earth via shuttle missions (deemed too expensive, as the station (USOS) is not designed for disassembly and this would require at least 27 shuttle missions[248]), natural orbital decay with random reentry similar to Skylab, boosting the station to a higher altitude (which would simply delay reentry) and a controlled targeted de-orbit to a remote ocean area.[249]
The technical feasibility of a controlled targeted deorbit into a remote ocean was found to be possible only with Russia's assistance.[249] At the time ISS was launched, the Russian Space Agency had experience from de-orbiting the Salyut 4, 5, 6, and 7 space stations, while NASA's first intentional controlled de-orbit of a satellite (the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory) would not occur for another two years.[250] NASA currently has no spacecraft capable of de-orbiting the ISS at the time of decommissioning.[251] Skylab, the only space station built and launched entirely by the US, decayed from orbit slowly over 5 years, and no attempt was made to de-orbit the station using a deorbital burn. Remains of Skylab hit populated areas of Esperance, Western Australia.[252] without injuries or loss of life.
While the entire USOS cannot be reused and will be discarded, some Russian modules will be reused. Nauka, the Node module, two science power platforms and Rassvet, launched between 2010 and 2015 and joined to the ROS will be separated to form the next Russian space station OPSEK.[253]
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[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: International Space Station |
| Wikinews has news related to: |
[edit] Youtube
View the motion picture First Orbit- ISS: Video (01:02): Earth (Time-Lapse)
- ISS: Video (00:27): Earth and Auroras (Time-Lapse)
[edit] Space Agency Youtube channels
[edit] Agency websites
[edit] Live viewing
Simple instructions on where and when to look for the ISS may be found on Heavens-above[edit] Image galleries
- ISS: Interactive Reference Guide
- ISS: Image Gallery Search Page
- ISS: Assembly Sequence: Animation
- Commons
[edit] Research
- Daily ISS Reports
- NASA: Station Science
- ESA: Columbus
- JAXA: Space Environment Utilization and Space Experiment
- RSC Energia: Science Research on ISS Russian Segment
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