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Space Station

Also known as:Orbital StationSpace LaboratoryOrbital Laboratory

A space station is a large, crewed spacecraft in low Earth orbit (LEO) designed to support long-duration human habitation and scientific research in the microgravity environment of space. Unlike capsules or shuttles, space stations are not designed for interplanetary travel but serve as orbiting laboratories, assembly platforms, and staging posts for future deep-space missions. The International Space Station (ISS), a joint project of NASA, Roscosmos, ESA, JAXA, and CSA, has been continuously inhabited since November 2000 and represents the largest human-made structure in space, orbiting at approximately 400 km altitude with an orbital period of ~92 minutes.

Notable Space Stations in History

StationCountry/AgencyOrbit AltitudeOperational PeriodKey Fact
Salyut 1USSR~200–222 km1971First space station
SkylabUSA (NASA)~435 km1973–1979First US space station
MirUSSR/Russia~354–374 km1986–2001First modular space station
ISSMulti-national~400–410 km1998–presentLargest in space, 109 m wide
Tiangong (CSS)China (CNSA)~390–400 km2021–presentChina's permanent station

Interactive Tools

NASA ISS Tracker

Real-time ISS location tracker and visibility prediction tool

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Khan Academy: Space Exploration

Lessons on orbital mechanics and human space exploration history

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Wolfram Alpha

Calculate orbital parameters, period, and velocity for space station orbits

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The International Space Station photographed from Space Shuttle Atlantis during STS-132

Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Related Terms

Astronomy

Artificial Satellite

An artificial satellite is any human-made object intentionally placed into orbit around a celestial body — most commonly Earth — to perform specific functions such as telecommunications, Earth observation, weather monitoring, navigation (GPS), scientific research, or military surveillance. Satellites follow orbital paths determined by the balance between gravitational attraction and their tangential velocity; they are classified by orbital altitude into Low Earth Orbit (LEO: 160–2000 km), Medium Earth Orbit (MEO: 2000–35,786 km), and Geostationary Orbit (GEO: 35,786 km). Sputnik 1, launched by the Soviet Union on 4 October 1957, was the first artificial satellite, marking the beginning of the Space Age.

Astronomy

Escape Velocity

Escape velocity is the minimum speed an object must achieve to escape the gravitational field of a massive body without any further propulsion, assuming no atmospheric drag and a radial (straight-up) trajectory. It is derived by equating the kinetic energy of the object to the magnitude of its gravitational potential energy. Escape velocity is a critical concept in rocketry and planetary science: Earth's escape velocity is approximately 11.2 km/s, while the Sun's is about 617.5 km/s, and a black hole's escape velocity at the event horizon equals the speed of light.

Astronomy

Astronaut

An astronaut is a person trained by a human spaceflight program to command, pilot, or serve as a crew member of a spacecraft, conducting scientific research, maintenance, and exploration activities in the space environment. The term is used by NASA and other Western agencies; the Russian equivalent is cosmonaut and the Chinese term is taikonaut. Astronauts undergo extensive training in orbital mechanics, spacewalking (EVA — Extra-Vehicular Activity), spacecraft systems, medical procedures, and survival techniques before being qualified for spaceflight assignments. As of 2024, approximately 650 people from 41 countries have traveled to space.

From Latin statio (a standing place, post, or station) combined with "space." The concept of a space station was envisioned by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and Hermann Oberth in the early 20th century. Wernher von Braun popularized the idea in the 1950s through articles in Collier's magazine.

space explorationISSmicrogravitylow earth orbithuman spaceflightorbital mechanics