KSC-01PP-0208.jpg KSC-01PP-0078Hình nhỏKSC-01PP-0209KSC-01PP-0078Hình nhỏKSC-01PP-0209
At Launch Pad 39A, the U.S. Laboratory Destiny waits in Atlantis’s payload bay for closure of the payload bay doors. Destiny, a key element in the construction of the International Space Station, is 28 feet long and weighs 16 tons. This research and command-and-control center is the most sophisticated and versatile space laboratory ever built. It will ultimately house a total of 23 experiment racks for crew support and scientific research. Destiny will be launched Feb. 7 on STS-98, the seventh construction flight to the ISS.
Information
Taken in
Kennedy Space Center
Tác giả
NASA
Miêu tả
At Launch Pad 39A, the U.S. Laboratory Destiny waits in Atlantis’s payload bay for closure of the payload bay doors. Destiny, a key element in the construction of the International Space Station, is 28 feet long and weighs 16 tons. This research and command-and-control center is the most sophisticated and versatile space laboratory ever built. It will ultimately house a total of 23 experiment racks for crew support and scientific research. Destiny will be launched Feb. 7 on STS-98, the seventh construction flight to the ISS.
Khởi tạo vào
Thứ Ba 30 Tháng Giêng 2001
Source link
https://science.ksc.nasa.gov/gallery/photos/2001/captions/
Thăm quan
119
Location
View on OpenStreetMap
Bảng xếp hạng
không có đánh giá
Đánh giá hình này
License
CC BY-NC
Modified by WikiArchives
No (original)
Tải xuống
0