at
Johnson Space Center in
Houston, Texas. The
space station is located in
orbit around the
Earth at an altitude of approximately , a type of orbit usually termed
low Earth orbit (the actual height varies over time by several kilometers due to
atmospheric drag and
reboosts). It orbits Earth in a
period of about 90 minutes; by August 2007 it had completed more than 50,000 orbits since launch of
Zarya on 20 November 1998. A total of 14 main pressurized modules were scheduled to be part of the ISS by its completion date in 2010. A number of smaller pressurized sections will be adjunct to them (
Soyuz spacecraft (permanently 2 as lifeboats – 6 months rotations),
Progress transporters (2 or more), the
Quest and
Pirs airlocks, as well as periodically the
H-II Transfer Vehicle). The
US Orbital Segment was completed in 2011 after the installation of the
Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer during the
STS-134 mission. The
Russian Orbital Segment assembly has been on an indefinite hiatus since the installation of the
Rassvet module in 2010 during the
STS-132 mission. The
Rassvet module on the ISS right now was originally supposed to be the on-ground dynamic testing mock-up of the now-cancelled
Science Power Platform. The
Nauka science laboratory module contains new crew quarters, life support equipment that can produce oxygen and water, and a new galley. The
Nauka was originally supposed to be delivered to the ISS in 2007 but cost overruns and quality control problems delayed it for over a decade. The
Nauka module finally launched in July 2021 and docked to the nadir port of Zvezda module after several days of free flight followed by the
Prichal which launched on 24 November 2021. There are plans to add 2 or 3 more modules that would attach to
Prichal during the mid-2020s. Adding more Russian modules will help the
Zvezda module greatly because ''Zvezda's
originally installed central command computers no longer work (three ThinkPad laptops are now the Zvezda's
central command computers) and its Elektron oxygen generators are not replaceable and failed again for a short time in 2020 after multiple malfunctions throughout their history. In Russian modules all the hardware is launched with the equipment permanently installed. It is impossible to replace hardware like in the US Orbital Segment with its very wide 51 inch (105 cm) hatch openings between modules. This potential problem with the Zvezda'' was made apparent when in October 2020 the toilet, oven, and Elektron all malfunctioned at the same time and the cosmonauts onboard had to make emergency repairs. The ISS, when completed, will consist of a set of communicating pressurized modules connected to a
truss, on which four large pairs of
photovoltaic modules (solar panels) are attached. The pressurized modules and the truss are perpendicular: the truss spanning from
starboard to
port and the habitable zone extending on the
aft-forward axis. Although during the construction the station
attitude may vary, when all four photovoltaic modules are in their definitive position the aft-forward axis will be parallel to the velocity vector. In addition to the assembly and utilization flights, approximately 30 Progress spacecraft flights are required to provide logistics until 2010. Experimental equipment, fuel and consumables are and will be delivered by all vehicles visiting the ISS: the
SpaceX Dragon, the Russian Progress, the European
ATV and the Japanese
HTV, and space station
downmass will be carried back to Earth facilities on the Dragon. ==
Columbia disaster and changes in construction plans==