Scott Hanko
Spacelab Laboratory Module
Manufacturer: ERNO, VFW Fokker
Country of Origin: Federal Republic of Germany
Dimensions:
Overall: 13 ft. tall x 13 ft. diameter x 23 ft. deep, 31,060 lb. (396.2 x 396.2 x 701cm, 14088.7kg)
Materials:
Aluminum structure; MLI multi-layer thermal insulation blankets (Nomex, aluminized mylar, gold foil, etc.)
Developed by the European Space Agency, Spacelab was a modular laboratory system installed in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle orbiter. During Spacelab missions in the 1980s and 1990s, the Shuttle served as an intermittent space station for research conducted by scientists and astronauts. The laboratory module, a pressurized cylindrical room connected by a tunnel to the crew cabin, was Spacelab's primary element. It was outfitted with racks containing subsystems, computers, work stations, stowage lockers, supplies, equipment, and experiments that varied from mission to mission.
Two laboratory modules were flown on a total of 16 missions from 1983 through 1998. This one, Module #1, was used nine times, first on the Spacelab 1 mission in 1983 and last on the Microgravity Science Laboratory missions in 1997. NASA transferred it to the Museum when the Spacelab program ended.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center Virginia
Spacelab Laboratory Module
Manufacturer: ERNO, VFW Fokker
Country of Origin: Federal Republic of Germany
Dimensions:
Overall: 13 ft. tall x 13 ft. diameter x 23 ft. deep, 31,060 lb. (396.2 x 396.2 x 701cm, 14088.7kg)
Materials:
Aluminum structure; MLI multi-layer thermal insulation blankets (Nomex, aluminized mylar, gold foil, etc.)
Developed by the European Space Agency, Spacelab was a modular laboratory system installed in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle orbiter. During Spacelab missions in the 1980s and 1990s, the Shuttle served as an intermittent space station for research conducted by scientists and astronauts. The laboratory module, a pressurized cylindrical room connected by a tunnel to the crew cabin, was Spacelab's primary element. It was outfitted with racks containing subsystems, computers, work stations, stowage lockers, supplies, equipment, and experiments that varied from mission to mission.
Two laboratory modules were flown on a total of 16 missions from 1983 through 1998. This one, Module #1, was used nine times, first on the Spacelab 1 mission in 1983 and last on the Microgravity Science Laboratory missions in 1997. NASA transferred it to the Museum when the Spacelab program ended.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center Virginia