Latest News

    Progress Activities for Station Crew

    Michael Barratt and Koichi Wakata Image above: Astronauts Michael Barratt (left) and Koichi Wakata talk to students in Atlanta. Credit: NASA TV

    The International Space Station is set to take out the garbage after Expedition 19 Commander Gennady Padalka closed the hatch on a trash-filled ISS Progress 32 (P32) cargo craft. The P32 will undock Wednesday at 11:18 a.m. EDT and burn up over the Pacific Ocean 12 days later. Prior to deorbit, ground controllers will perform a series of engine firings and study their effect on plasma in the Earth’s atmosphere.

    Before closing the hatch, Padalka removed lights from the P32, stowed them in the station and updated the Inventory Management System. The cosmonaut also replaced a laptop computer in the Russian segment of the orbiting laboratory.

    On Thursday, the ISS Progress 33 (P33) will launch from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 2:37 p.m. The P33 is delivering food, fuel, oxygen, supplies and hardware. Docking will take place at 3:23 p.m. on May 12 at the Pirs docking compartment.

    Flight Engineers Michael Barratt and Koichi Wakata spent some time Tuesday morning answering questions from students. The students took part in the event from Fernbank Science Center in Atlanta, Ga., which is a part of NASA’s Science, Engineering, Mathematics and Aerospace Academy, or SEMMA. SEMMA is a national program designed to increase participation and retention of historically underserved and underrepresented youth in grades kindergarten through 12, in science, technology, engineering and math.

    › Read more about Expedition 19
    › View crew timelines

    2009 International Space Station Calendar

    As part of NASA's celebration of the 10th anniversary of the International Space Station, the agency is offering a special 2009 calendar to teachers, as well as the general public.

    The calendar contains photographs taken from the space station and highlights historic NASA milestones and fun facts about the international construction project of unprecedented complexity that began in 1998.

    › Download calendar (5.3 Mb PDF)

International Space Station Features

  • Name Node 3

    NASA Names ISS Component 'Tranquility'

    After more than a million online responses, the station module formerly known as Node 3 will be called Tranquility.

  • Do You Know Where Your Space Station Is?

    Do You Know Where Your Space Station Is?

    Tired of those boring old tracking maps that show the space station going around and around the Earth, and wondering what the view from up there must be like?

  • Expedition 18 Commander Mike Fincke shortly after landing

    Expedition 18 Crew Lands in Kazakhstan

    Commander Mike Fincke and Flight Engineer Yury Lonchakov of the 18th International Space Station crew landed in Kazakhstan at 3:16 a.m. EDT Wednesday after about six months in space.

  • Expedition 18 and 19 crew members

    Expedition 19 Crew Docks with Space Station

    Commander Gennady Padalka and Flight Engineer Michael Barratt of the 19th International Space Station crew docked their Soyuz TMA-14 to the International Space Station at 9:05 a.m. EDT Saturday.

  • Launch of Expedition 19

    Expedition 19 Crew Launches from Baikonur

    Commander Gennady Padalka and Flight Engineer Michael Barratt of the 19th International Space Station crew launched in their Soyuz TMA-14 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 7:49 a.m. EDT Thursday to begin a six-month stay in space.

  • Station Spacewalkers Install Experiments, Probe

    Tuesday's spacewalk with Expedition 18 Commander Mike Fincke and Flight Engineer Yury Lonchakov concluded at 5:11 p.m. EDT when the Pirs docking module airlock was closed. The spacewalk concluded ahead of schedule, lasting 4 hours and 49 minutes.

Interactive Features

See the Station in the Sky

Related Multimedia