International Space Station (ISS)

  • ISS is a large spacecraft in low Earth orbit.
  • It is habitable spacecraft that orbits Earth at an average altitude of approximately 420 kilometers (260 miles).
  • It serves as a unique and collaborative space laboratory, research facility, and living space for astronauts and cosmonauts from various countries.

Features of ISS

  • Construction and Ownership
    • The major partners include NASA (United States), Roscosmos (Russia), ESA (European Space Agency), JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
      • In 2022, Russia announced that it will pull out of ISS after 2024 and focus on building its own orbiting outpost.
    • These agencies have contributed modules, components, and resources to construct and maintain the station.
  • Size and Structure
    • The ISS is quite large, with a mass of around 460 tons and a habitable volume roughly equivalent to the interior of a Boeing 747 aircraft.
    • It consists of various interconnected modules and components, including laboratories, living quarters, and docking ports.
  • Orbit and Duration
    • It travels at 8 kilometers (5 miles) per second. This means it orbits Earth every 90 minutes.
      • It passes over our heads 16 times every 24 hours — travelling through 16 sunrises and sunsets.
    • Missions typically last six months, although some crew members may stay for shorter or longer durations.
  • International Crew
    • The ISS is continuously inhabited by a rotating crew of astronauts and cosmonauts from different nations.
    • These crew members live and work on the station for several months at a time, conducting experiments, maintaining systems, and performing various tasks necessary to keep the station operational.

Significance

  • One of the primary purposes of the ISS is to conduct scientific research and experiments in the unique microgravity environment of space.
    • Microgravity is often referred to as near zero gravity or weightlessness.
  • Researchers from around the world use the station to study a wide range of fields, including biology, physics, astronomy, and Earth sciences.
  • The ISS has contributed to our understanding of topics such as human health in space, materials science, and climate change.
  • Human beings have been living in space every day since the first crew arrived.

Launch

  • The first segment of the ISS — the Zarya Control Module — was Russian and launched November 20, 1998.
    • Zarya supplied fuel storage and battery power, and served as a docking zone for other space vehicles arriving at the ISS.
  • Later, in December 1998, the US launched the Unity Node 1 module. Together, the two modules were the start of a functioning space laboratory.
  • Over the course of 42 assembly flights, the ISS became what it is today.

Scientific discoveries on the ISS have benefited life on Earth

  • Astronauts have conducted hundreds of scientific experiments on the ISS.
  • From Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease to cancer, asthma and heart disease — it’s all been studied in space.
  • Scientists say some medical experiments are best done in space because cells behave in microgravity more like they do inside the human body, but it’s difficult to recreate such conditions on Earth.
  • There have been discoveries to benefit drug development, new water purification systems, methods to mitigate muscle and bone atrophy and those that have led innovations in food production.

Future of ISS  

  • Plans for the future operation of the ISS were thrown into uncertainty with the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022.
  • Both the European Space Agency and national bodies withdrew from international collaborations with Russia.
  • Later, Russia said it was leaving the ISS to build its own space station.
  • Also, old and new space faring nations want to make an independent mark on space. They include Japan, China, India, the United Arab Emirates and others.
  • The US and Europe have said they remain committed to the International Space Station through 2030.
  • But plans are afoot for a post-ISS world, as well:
    • NASA is almost entirely focused on its Artemis program and plans to populate the moon.
    • ESA is working toward a new space station, which it is calling Starlab.


POSTED ON 02-09-2024 BY ADMIN
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