![]() |
||||||||
Right now, the International Space Station is the world’s highest construction site. But just how do you build something that is about 400 kilometres above the Earth and orbiting at approximately 28 000 km/h? The answer is “very carefully” – and one piece at a time.
When
It will take about 50 launches to bring all the Space Station's pieces into orbit – in exactly the right order, of course. Each new section must fit into those already in place. Every module has some kind of docking adaptor to allow it to fit precisely into another or to a node. In the beginning, most of the work was done by the robotic arm fitted in the Space Shuttle. Now, the Space Station has its own robotic arm, the Canadarm2. It is a bigger and more sophisticated robotic arm that helps enormously.
|
||||||||