15 Out-of-This-World Facts About the International Space Station

1. Sixteen nations were involved in the construction of the ISS: The
United States, Russia, Canada, Japan, Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, France,
Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the
United Kingdom.
2. Sixty-five miles per hour may be a pretty standard speed limit on
highways here on Earth, but up in orbit, the ISS travels a whopping 5
miles-per-second. That means the station circles the entire planet once every
90 minutes.
3. You may think your house or apartment is spacious, but it’s got
nothing on the ISS. At about 357.6 feet (or 109 meters) long, the International
Space Station gives astronauts plenty of room to stretch out.
4. Made up of hundreds of major and minor components, the ISS is the largest
manned object ever put into space. The ISS has a pressurized volume of 32,333
cubic feet, the same as a Boeing 747. It's four times larger than the Russian
space station MIR and five times larger than the U.S. station Skylab.
5. The ISS is the single most expensive object ever built. The cost of
the ISS has been estimated at over $120 billion.
6. There are only two bathrooms
on the entire station. The urine of both the crewmembers and laboratory animals
is filtered back into the station’s drinking water supply, so at least the
astronauts will never get thirsty.
7. Just because you’re in space doesn’t mean you can’t get a virus on
your computer. The 52 computers onboard the ISS have been infected by viruses
more than once. The first was a worm known as the W32.Gammima.AG, which started
spreading by stealing passwords to online video games on Earth. It wasn’t a big
deal, though—NASA responded by calling the virus a “nuisance.”
8. The ISS is a veritable hub of space traffic. In June of 2014, four
separate international spacecraft were docked there, including the Progress
M-21M cargo spacecraft, which departed the station on June 9 after a six-month
mission to drop off food, fuel, and supplies. In September, a resupply mission
from SpaceX visited the station, and an entire new crew arrived that month as
well. The station’s full flight schedule has docking events planned through the
summer of 2016.
9. The ISS is probably one of the only places you can actually smell
space. A former ISS astronaut has described how a “metallic-ionization-type
smell” occurs in the area where the pressure between the station and other
docking crafts is equalized.
10. Currently, the ISS is the third brightest object in the night sky
after the moon and Venus. Eagle-eyed stargazers can even spot it if they look
closely enough—it looks like a fast-moving airplane. If you can’t find it, NASA
has a service called Spot the Station that texts you when and where it will
pass over your location. If you want the opposite view (though we’re pretty
sure you won’t be able to spot yourself), there is a live video feed pointing
towards Earth that runs when the crew is off-duty.
11. Though the plan is to de-orbit the ISS in 2024, the oldest module of
the station—the Russian-built and American-financed component called “Zarya,”
first launched in 1998—can function until 2028 (as will The Unity, the first
entirely American ISS component, which was also launched that year). Once the
ISS kicks the bucket, the Russians plan to add their leftover modules to their
new station, OPSEK (or Orbital Piloted Assembly and Experiment Complex).
12. Because the human body tends to lose muscle and bone mass in zero
gravity environments, all astronauts aboard the ISS must work out at least two
hours a day to maintain normal Earth-based bodily health.
13. The electrical systems on the ISS include 8 miles of wire. That’s
longer than the entire perimeter of New York City's Central Park.
14. Astronauts eat three square meals a day on the ISS, but when they
sit down for a meal, they don’t sit down at all. There are no chairs around the
main eating area. Instead, the astronauts simply stabilize themselves and
float. Diners have to be very slow and careful when bringing food to their mouths
so it doesn't accidentally float across the station. Also, they can’t just
stroll over to the refrigerator and grab a snack—all the food is canned,
dehydrated, or packaged so it doesn’t require refrigeration.
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