Image above: The International Space Station's length and width is about the size of a football field. Credit: NASA The International Space Station marks its 10th anniversary of continuous human occupation on Nov. 2, 2010. Since Expedition 1, which launched Oct. 31, 2000, and docked Nov. 2, the space station has been visited by 196 individuals from eight different countries.
At the time of the anniversary, the station’s odometer will read more than 1.5 billion statute miles (the equivalent of eight round trips to the Sun), over the course of 57,361 orbits around the Earth. Since the first module, Zarya, launched at 1:40 a.m. EST on Nov. 20, 1998, it has made a total of 68,519 orbits of our home planet, or about 1.7 billion miles on its odometer.
As of the Nov. 2 anniversary date there have been 103 launches to the space station: 67 Russian vehicles, 34 space shuttles, one European and one Japanese vehicle. A total of 150 spacewalks have been conducted in support of space station assembly totaling more than 944 hours.
The space station, including its large solar arrays, spans the area of a U.S. football field, including the end zones, and weighs 827,794 pounds. The complex now has more livable room than a conventional five-bedroom house, and has two bathrooms and a gymnasium.
Additional launches will continue to augment these facts and figures, so check back here for the latest.
International Space Station Size & Mass - 40 feet long (pressurized section)
- 357 feet long (wing-to-wing)
- 291 feet long (truss)
- 240 feet wide (solar array pair)
- 45 feet high (Unity, Z1)
- 382 tons (827,126 pounds or 375,179 kilograms)
- 29,561 cubic feet of pressurized volume – 94 % complete