The incredible collaboration behind the International Space Station Tien Nguyen

Have you ever been gazing at a starry sky

when suddenly
a bright dot glided into view?

If it wasn’t blinking, then you’ve had
the distinct pleasure

of seeing one of mankind’s greatest
collaborative feats with your own eyes:

The International Space Station.

Roughly the size of six-bedroom house,
and weighing more than 320 cars,

the International Space Station
is so large

that no single rocket could have
lifted it into orbit.

Instead, it was assembled piece by piece

while hurtling through space
at 28,000 kilometers per hour,

lapping the Earth once every 90 minutes.

It all started when sixteen nations signed

the Space Station
Intergovernmental Agreement,

laying out each partner’s
expected contributions to the ISS,

from modules and maintenance
to sharing information and finances.

At an estimated 100 billion U.S. dollars,

the Space Station would be
the most expensive object ever built.

The whole world watched

as a Russian rocket launched
the first module of the ISS into the sky.

Zarya, meaning sunrise,
was equipped with two solar panels

and a propulsion system
that had the important task

of keeping the young station
from crashing into the Earth

by staying a safe 400 kilometers away.

The U.S. Space Shuttle Endeavour
followed two weeks later

carrying Unity, a node module to which
other modules could be connected,

and an international
six-person assembly crew.

Then came Zvezda, which brought
communications and living accommodations.

Ever since the International
Space Station’s first tenants arrived,

it’s been continually occupied

with more than 200 visitors spending
an average of six months on board.

Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti
holds the record

for the longest single space flight
by a woman at 199 days on the ISS.

2001 saw the arrival of Destiny,
the first of four research modules,

where astronauts spend
approximately 36 hours a week

conducting extraordinary experiments
in microgravity.

Their schedules are packed with exercise,

two hours a day to fend off
muscle atrophy,

station maintenance and repair,

and connecting with family
or awe-inspired minds around the world.

But they still find time for fun,
with regular movie nights

and even shooting
the first music video in space.

Destiny also controls the seven-jointed
robotic Canadarm2.

Capable of moving
more than 100,000 kilograms,

it’s perfect for unloading
new arrivals from shuttles.

2001 was a busy year for the Space Station
with the addition of Quest,

the main airlock for strolls outside,

and Pirs, a pier for Russian
spacecrafts to dock

including the ever-ready
emergency escape vehicle, Soyuz.

Then, on February 1st, 2003,

after delivering
research modules to the ISS,

the space shuttle
Columbia exploded during reentry

tragically killing
the seven-member crew on board.

After a four-year hiatus, work quickly
picked up pace

with the addition of more hubs,
airlocks, docks,

and an observation cupola for stunning
360-degree views of our world and beyond.

Other critical components included
platforms and trusses to support radiators

that direct all the heat generated
by the station’s electronics into space

and solar panels that are efficient enough
to power 55 homes.

It took ten years and over 30 missions,

but finally, the International
Space Station was complete,

coinciding with the U.S. Space
Shuttle Program’s retirement.

The Space Station continues to serve
as an incredible model

for international collaboration.

This year, two people
began a one-year stay on the ISS,

allowing scientists to study the long-term
physical and psychological effects

of being in space,

which would prove useful for increasingly
ambitious space travel,

like trips to Mars.

Over its lifetime, we’ve learned
an immense amount scientifically,

but also about
our capacity to work together

and accomplish truly remarkable acts.