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Forum:Space Shuttles - Space Station
Topic:ISS: Ten years of continuous human residency
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On Oct. 25, the station also set a record for being the longest continuously inhabited spacecraft. On that day, the International Space Station eclipsed the previous record of 3,644 days set by the Russian Mir Space Station. With each new day, NASA and its partners are pushing the envelope of human achievement in space into uncharted territory.

Ten years ago, Bill Shepherd, Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev launched into history as the first crew to live on the International Space Station. They blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Oct. 31, 2000, and docked with the station two days later. From the moment the hatch of their Soyuz spacecraft opened and they entered the fledgling space station, there have been people living and working in orbit, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.

"As we look forward to the next 10 years, taking us through 2020, the space station will serve many roles," said Mike Suffredini, International Space Station program manager since 2005. "With its permanent human presence, it will serve as a foothold for long-term exploration into space, being an integral part of testing human endurance, equipment reliability and processes essential for space exploration."

Before his launch, Expedition 1 commander Shepherd explained that the station "gives us unique access to the space environment where we hope we can do very interesting and productive research, but it really means we [will] develop a lot of the capabilities and technology that'll allow humans to go elsewhere away from the planet."

Including the huge solar arrays, the space station is larger than an American football field, including the end zones. Inside its pressurized modules, where residents live, work and sometimes play, it is as large as a five-bedroom home, with two bathrooms, a personal gymnasium and the ultimate 360-degree bay window on the world. Its total habitable volume will be more than 12,000 cubic feet after space shuttle Discovery delivers the complex's next-to-last planned addition.

"To have constructed something on orbit greater than a football field in length, with more internal pressurized volume than a 747, with parts and pieces and participation from 15 countries around the world, full-time 24-hour/7 day a week operations and human presence for 10 years, fills me with an incredible sense of pride in what our organization can accomplish," said Peggy Whitson, NASA's chief astronaut and the station's first female commander on Expedition 16.


Click on image to download as PDF. Credit: NASA

With more than 600 experiments under its belt, the orbiting laboratory has provided continuous access that allows researchers and engineers the opportunity to constantly fine-tune their investigations in the unique, nearly zero-gravity environment. As a research outpost, the station is a test bed for future technologies and a research facility for new, advanced industrial materials, communications technology, medical research and more.

"The ISS represents an incredible international engineering accomplishment," said Whitson, who also was principal investigator for an experiment that evaluated how human kidneys perform in orbit. "The construction, assembly and operations could even be viewed as miraculous if you don't consider the HUGE efforts of our teams to make it look easy."

The station is a venture of international cooperation among NASA, the Russian Federal Space Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and 11 members of the European Space Agency: Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. More than 100,000 people in space agencies and contractor facilities in 37 U.S. states and throughout the world are involved in this endeavor.

"The partnership, which constructed the station, will serve as the foundation for the international technological collaboration needed to further man's reach into space, Suffredini said. "The station's capability and sheer size today are truly amazing. The tremendous technological achievement in orbit is matched only by the cooperation and perseverance of its partners on the ground. We have overcome differences in language, geography and engineering philosophies to succeed."

While people on Earth have come together to build and operate the complex, the resident crews from around the world have also come together in space. May 2009 saw the station become home to its first six-person crew, Expedition 20, which also marked the first time at least one crew member from each of the supporting space agencies was aboard at the same time.

The International Space Station boasts 29 research facilities, providing an example of cooperation by humans and robots that is expected to become a mainstay of space exploration throughout our solar system.

When asked what his favorite memory while aboard station was, Expeditions 19 and 20 Flight Engineer Mike Barratt said, "The Earth views were stunning and microgravity is incredible, but my strongest memories were gathering around the galley table for food, music, and ward room conversation. Everyone who wasn't on the planet was at dinner there!"

Garrett Reisman, a flight engineer on Expeditions 16 and 17, said one of his favorite memories was spending a week sleeping in Columbus, the ESA-provided laboratory module.

"There's a window in the node about the size of a small dinner plate. As I lay in my bunk, the Earthshine would come through the window and light up the ceiling of Node 2 (also known as Harmony), and I could see the reflection of the Earth. There wasn't a lot of detail, but enough that I could see clouds and land formations."

What started out with a crew of three "turning on the lights" continues today with a crew of six conducting science experiments and maintaining their home away from home.

"The stations that support long duration spaceflights are a basis, a foundation for any remote missions," said Expedition 1's Russian flight engineer Krikalev, "because remote missions tend to be lengthy missions and we have learned to fly for a long time and to support life on board for a long time, and we learned how to build life support systems accordingly."

"The second factor is further development of international cooperation," Krikalev continued. "We had some doubts whether we would be able to be building significant projects together and whether we will be able to complete them and the station is a good illustration that we're capable of doing that and we have achieved the result we wanted to achieve together."

Each international partner is allotted a certain amount of resources for research and technology development, including crew time when it is needed to support an experiment. NASA currently uses about half of its available assets on the station for its own research, which leaves the other half for users eligible under U.S. National Laboratory guidelines established by Congress in 2005.

"As a National Laboratory," Suffredini added, "[the station] will provide opportunities to academia, commercial entities and other government agencies to pursue their research and development needs in support of a wide range of scientific inquiries in biology, human physiology, physical, materials, Earth and space sciences. Station will also be the first destination of commercial endeavors in low-Earth orbit with the safe delivery of cargo and crew."

"We work with a number of other government agencies," said Marybeth Edeen, National Laboratory manager, "and we have a number of commercial customers who are using station for their objectives, be they commercial or research or business."

"The NASA mission-driven research includes some microgravity, physical and life sciences, the Human Research Program (HRP), NASA exploration technology development and the Science Mission Directorate," said Dr. Julie Robinson, program scientist for space station. "For example, our HRP is testing things and evaluating the effects of space on the human body and what you might need to do for astronauts to go beyond Earth orbit safely."

The station is an unprecedented, state-of-the-art, orbiting laboratory complex that continues to expand the boundaries of space research. Its life-support systems are taking recycling into uncharted territory as residents drink much of the same water and breathe much of the same air over and over. The unique capabilities of its systems and laboratories will lead to discoveries that will benefit missions farther into outer space. These discoveries will also benefit people all over the world, now and in the future.

"With another 10 years of operating a mature ISS, we should expect and realize the science returns for which the station was built. We owe the world answers on questions of basic science and medicine, and the ISS can deliver abundantly if utilized carefully," Barratt said. "In addition we must come out with the mature and tested technologies and systems to go further with confidence. All of the partner agencies and nations hold stake in these, and the ISS becomes a unique high tech glue that holds the international space community together in ways unimaginable without it."

Robert Pearlman
NASA Marks 10th Anniversary Of Life On Space Station

NASA commemorated the 10th anniversary of human life, work and research on the International Space Station (ISS) with a series of roundtable discussions.

The events featured former space station residents, key leaders and team members who have guided the station through its first 10 years. Panelists at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida; Johnson Space Center in Houston; Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.; and NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC discussed the challenges and accomplishments of the station's first decade of assembly and research and considered the promise of the upcoming decade of microgravity research.

On Nov. 2, 2000, Expedition 1 commander Bill Shepherd and flight engineers Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko became the first residents of the space station. Since then, 200 explorers have visited the orbiting complex, 15 nations have contributed modules and hardware, and more than 600 experiments have been conducted aboard the station.

Kennedy Space Center

  • Bob Cabana, director, Kennedy Space Center
  • Josie Burnett, director, ISS and spacecraft processing
  • Bill Dowdell, deputy director, ISS and spacecraft processing
  • David Bethay, director, program management development, The Boeing Company

Johnson Space Center

  • Mike Suffredini, ISS program manager
  • Peggy Whitson, NASA chief astronaut, Expedition 5 flight engineer and Expedition 16 commander
  • Mike Lopez-Alegria, NASA astronaut and Expedition 14 commander
  • Clay Anderson, NASA astronaut and Expedition15 and 16 flight engineer
  • John McCullough, chief, Flight Director Office
  • John Vollmer, director of avionics and software for Boeing, NASA's prime contractor for the station

Marshall Space Flight Center

  • Lybrease Woodard, manager, Marshall Operations Directors Office
  • Annette Sledd, manager, Marshall Space Station Payloads Office
  • Bob Bagdigian, manager, Environmental Control and Life Support Development
  • Shawn Reagan, manager, Multipurpose Logistics Modules

NASA Headquarters

  • Bill Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for Space Operations Mission Directorate
  • Lynn Cline, deputy associate administrator for Space Operations Mission Directorate
  • Mark Uhran, assistant associate administrator for International Space Station
  • Mike Hawes, associate administrator for Independent Program and Cost Evaluation and former deputy associate administrator for International Space Station
Robert PearlmanNASA Television video releases NASA Television video release
NASA Administrator Marks ISS Tenth Anniversary

As the 10 year anniversary of continuous human presence on the International Space Station is commemorated, Administrator Charles Bolden congratulates the thousands of NASA employees and contractors, as well as NASA's international partners, for making the important milestone possible.

First ISS Commander Reflects on Station's 10th Anniversary

The commander of the first International Space Station crew, NASA's Bill Shepherd, took time during a visit to the Johnson Space Center in Houston September 14, 2010 to reflect on ten years of permanent human occupancy of the complex, the growth and maturation of the ISS and its role in forging solid international relations through the station partnership.

Expedition 1 Cosmonaut Remembers Stay on ISS

Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, the world's most experienced space traveler, reflected on the tenth anniversary of permanent human occupancy of the International Space Station, its growth and maturation and its role in forging solid international relations through the station partnership during an interview October 5, 2010 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

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