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ScienceGlobal issues

International Space Station: 25 years of a safe space

November 20, 2023

More than 140,000 Earth orbits and a quarter century on, the ISS is still a place of peaceful collaboration for science. Here's what you need to know.

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Aerial shot of the International Space Station with Earth below
Hanging out in outer space: the International Space Station has been an active human laboratory for 25 yearsImage: Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service/AP Photo/picture alliance

It passes over our heads 16 times every 24 hours — traveling through 16 sunrises and sunsets — at an altitude of a mere 430 kilometers (267 miles). It's possible to spot it from the ground and track where it is in the sky at any minute of the day.

But the International Space Station (ISS) and the science that astronauts carry out onboard often go unnoticed.

There have been numerous scientific discoveries on the ISS that have had a direct impact on our everyday lives on Earth (more on that below).

It is one of the world's most successful locations for international diplomacy, peace and collaboration, even in times of war. It's literally been a safe space for 25 years.

Here's what you need to know, starting with the basics.

When did the International Space Station 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.

One month later, on December 4, 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.

Among the first "live-in” astronauts were Bill Shepherd of NASA and Roscosmos cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev. Since then, the ISS has been continuously inhabited.

Coping with weightlessness

How big is the ISS?

The ISS is split into various spaces for living and working. It has six sleeping quarters, two bathrooms, a gym, and a 360-degree view bay window.

It measures 109 meters (357 feet) end-to-end, "one yard shy," states NASA, of a full-length American football field including the end zones. Or, if swimming is your thing, the ISS is more than twice the length of an Olympic swimming pool. And if you're into rockets, the ISS is shorter than SpaceX's Starship by 12 meters.

Its solar array wingspan is also 109 m. To compare: The largest commercial aircraft, the Airbus A380, has a wingspan of 79.8 meters.

And about 13 kilometers of electrical wires run through the space station.

What is the ISS's average speed?

As mentioned above, the ISS orbits Earth numerous times in one day — every 90 minutes to be precise — at a speed of 8 kilometers (5 miles) per second.

What do astronauts do onboard the ISS?

When they're not conducting scientific experiments (ones that can't be done on Earth), ISS astronauts go on regular spacewalks to add new components to the station, such as robotic arms, or run maintenance. There have been times when astronauts have had to inspect or fix holes that were created by space debris.

The astronauts are also on a strict health regimen. They have to mitigate the loss of muscle and bone mass, which is caused by microgravity in space. That includes working out on specially designed machines, including treadmills, for at least two hours a day.

But as researchers focus more and more on humans living in space, for example on the moon or Mars, the astronauts' daily exercise is also used to improve our scientific understanding of the effects of space on our bodies. What would happen if humans lived in microgravity for years on end? Would our bodies still be strong enough, or too weak to return to Earth?

Spacewalk at the International Space Station with astronauts Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O'Hara
Not a walk in the park: Spacewalks are tricky. Here, astronauts Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O'Hara accidentally lose a tool bag during regular maintenance on the ISSImage: NASA TV

What scientific discoveries on the ISS have benefited life on Earth?

Astronauts have conducted hundreds of scientific experiments on the ISS. Sometimes they experiment on themselves, monitoring their general health, nutrition or the effects of solar radiation. And sometimes they conduct experiments for scientists on Earth. These experiments have led to numerous scientific breakthroughs.

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.

How long will the ISS be operational?

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, and Russia said it was leaving the ISS to build its own space station. 

It's not just the war, though — old and new spacefaring 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. And ESA is working toward a new space station, which it is calling Starlab.

Seldom has the phrase "watch this space" meant so much.

Edited by: Carla Bleiker

DW Zulfikar Abbany
Zulfikar Abbany Senior editor fascinated by space, AI and the mind, and how science touches people