The U.S. Lab is lifted out of the vacuum chamber in the O&C Building
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Photo Number: KSC-00PP-0862
Release Date: 07-Jul-2000
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Description:
After successfully completing a leak test inside a vacuum chamber in the Operations and Checkout Building, the U.S. Lab, a component of the International Space Station, is ready to be lifted and removed from the chamber. The 32,000-pound scientific research lab, named Destiny, is the first Space Station element to spend seven days in the renovated vacuum chamber. 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.
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Height (Pixels) |
Size (Bytes) |
Thumbnail |
GIF |
100 |
67 |
10222 |
Slide |
GIF |
172 |
148 |
36670 |
Low |
GIF |
320 |
213 |
97151 |
Medium |
JPEG |
1024 |
683 |
224605 |
High |
JPEG |
2670 |
1780 |
1144252 |
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Address:
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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: Friday October 24 12:14:59 EDT 2003 (Anita Barrett) A service of the NASA Image Exchange (NIX)