The U.S. Lab is lifted and placed in vacuum chamber in O&C

[KSC-00PP-0844]


  • Photo Number: KSC-00PP-0844

  • Release Date: 01-Jul-2000

  • Description: - The U.S. Lab, a component of the International Space Station, is lifted above the three-story vacuum chamber into which the Lab will be placed. The 32,000-pound scientific research lab, named Destiny, is the first Space Station element to spend seven days in the renovated vacuum chamber for a leak test. Destiny is scheduled to be launched on Shuttle mission STS-98, the 5A assembly mission, targeted for Jan. 18, 2001. During the mission, the crew will install the Lab in the Space Station during a series of three space walks. The STS-98 mission will provide the Station with science research facilities and expand its power, life support and control capabilities. The U.S. Lab module continues a long tradition of microgravity materials research, first conducted by Skylab and later Shuttle and Spacelab missions. Destiny is expected to be a major feature in future research, providing facilities for biotechnology, fluid physics, combustion, and life sciences research.

    Resolution Format Width
    (Pixels)
    Height
    (Pixels)
    Size
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    Thumbnail GIF 67 100 10222
    Slide GIF 111 156 25115
    Low GIF 162 240 55717
    Medium JPEG 518 768 99648
    High JPEG 1800 2670 1023849

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    Name: NASA Kennedy Space Center

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    Photos By: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    Scanned By: Seven/Still Photo Imaging
    Captions: InDyne, Inc.
    Curator: NASA/KSC Internet Systems Lab (Dumoulin, Downs, Paladino)
    Last Updated: Tuesday August 28 18:52:50 EDT 2001 (Anita Barrett)

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