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Columbus poised
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| Image above: An overhead crane hoisted Columbus out of its workstand and into a special canister for the trip out to the launch pad to be loaded aboard space shuttle Atlantis. Photo credit: NASA/George Shelton |
Space shuttles used Spacelabs as research centers in space between 1983 and 1998. Two of the reusable modules were built to fit in a shuttle's cargo bay.
Unlike Columbus, which will stay in space permanently, the Spacelabs remained inside a shuttle throughout a mission, with the shuttle crew conducting research during the course of two-week flights.
Like Spacelab, Columbus was designed to support astronauts. Columbus is full of wiring and plumbing to keep life support systems running inside the module and host the science experiments it was built for.
"What we have is a mini space station," Woop said.
Engineering a segment to host men, women and experiments was a challenge for designers because the space was limited.
"It's a very organized laboratory," said Alessio Festa, ESA's mechanical system manager on Columbus.
The key is a design that calls for experiments and equipment to be carried inside racks that are about the size of refrigerators. The racks can be changed by astronauts in space because they don't weigh anything. On Earth, the racks can be loaded with special equipment and set up for the astronauts to operate or to run automatically.
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| Image above: A modified Italian cargo aircraft carried the Columbus module from an outfitting facility in Germany to NASA's Kennedy Space Center for launch. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossman |
Columbus can hold 10 experiment racks inside, but will launch with five in place. Other racks will be ferried aboard future missions.
After its construction in Italy and outfitting in Germany, Columbus flew aboard a large cargo aircraft across the Atlantic Ocean to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida for final preparations and a leak test.
The Columbus module has two amateur radio antennas installed. These will be used for ARISS school contacts and will also allow ATV operation from the Space Station.
Read more about the Columbus antennas
Columbus module and the
Amateur Radio antennas
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