Spacelab
Spacelab was a reusable laboratory developed by European Space Agency and used on certain spaceflights flown by the Space Shuttle. The laboratory comprised multiple components, including a pressurized module, an unpressurized carrier, and other related hardware housed in the Shuttle's cargo bay. The components were arranged in various configurations to meet the needs of each spaceflight.
Spacelab components flew on a total of about 32 Shuttle missions, depending on how such hardware and missions are tabulated. Spacelab allowed scientists to perform experiments in microgravity in geocentric orbit. There was a variety of Spacelab-associated hardware, so a distinction can be made between the major Spacelab program missions with European scientists running missions in the Spacelab habitable module, missions running other Spacelab hardware experiments, and other Space Transportation System missions that used some component of Spacelab hardware. There is some variation in counts of Spacelab missions, in part because there were different types of Spacelab missions with a large range in the amount of Spacelab hardware flown and the nature of each mission. There were at least 22 major Spacelab missions between 1983 and 1998, and Spacelab hardware was used on a number of other missions, with some of the Spacelab pallets being flown as late as 2008.
Background and history
In August 1973, NASA and European Space Research Organisation, now European Space Agency or ESA, signed a memorandum of understanding to build a science laboratory for use on Space Shuttle flights. Construction of Spacelab was started in 1974 by Entwicklungsring Nord, a subsidiary of VFW-Fokker GmbH, after merger with Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm named MBB/ERNO, and merged into EADS SPACE Transportation in 2003. The first lab module, LM1, was donated to NASA in exchange for flight opportunities for European astronauts. A second module, LM2, was bought by NASA for its own use from ERNO.Construction on the Spacelab modules began in 1974 by what was then the company ERNO-VFW-Fokker.
In the early 1970s NASA shifted its focus from the Lunar missions to the Space Shuttle, and also space research. The Administrator of NASA at the time moved the focus from a new space station to a space laboratory for the planned Space Shuttle. This would allow technologies for future space stations to be researched and harness the capabilities of the Space Shuttle for research.
Spacelab was produced by European Space Research Organisation, a consortium of ten European countries including:
- Austria
- Belgium
- Denmark
- France
- West Germany/Germany
- Italy
- Netherlands
- Spain
- Switzerland
- United Kingdom
Components
The system had some unique features including an intended two-week turn-around time and the roll-on-roll-off for loading in aircraft.
Spacelab consisted of a variety of interchangeable components, with the major one being a crewed laboratory that could be flown in the Space Shuttle orbiter's bay and returned to Earth. However, the habitable module did not have to be flown to conduct a Spacelab-type mission and there was a variety of pallets and other hardware supporting space research. The habitable module expanded the volume for astronauts to work in a shirt-sleeve environment and had space for equipment racks and related support equipment. When the habitable module was not used, some of the support equipment for the pallets could instead be housed in the smaller [|Igloo], a pressurized cylinder connected to the Space Shuttle orbiter crew area.
Spacelab missions typically supported multiple experiments, and the Spacelab 1 mission had experiments in the fields of space plasma physics, solar physics, atmospheric physics, astronomy, and Earth observation. The selection of appropriate modules was part of mission planning for Spacelab Shuttle missions, and for example, a mission might need less habitable space and more pallets, or vice versa.
Habitable module
The habitable Spacelab laboratory module comprised a cylindrical environment in the rear of the Space Shuttle orbiter payload bay, connected to the orbiter crew compartment by a tunnel. The laboratory had an outer diameter of, and each segment a length of. The laboratory module consisted at minimum of a core segment, which could be used alone in a short module configuration. The long module configuration included an additional experiment segment. It was also possible to operate Spacelab experiments from the orbiter's aft flight deck.The pressurized tunnel had its connection point at the orbiter's mid-deck. There were two different length tunnels depending on the location of the habitable module in the payload bay. When the laboratory module was not used, but additional space was needed for support equipment, another structure called the Igloo could be used.
Two laboratory modules were built, identified as LM1 and LM2. LM1 is on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum behind the Space Shuttle Discovery. LM2 was on display in the Bremenhalle exhibition in the Bremen Airport of Bremen, Germany from 2000 to 2010. It resides in building 4c at the nearby Airbus Defence and Space plant since 2010 and can only be viewed during guided tours.
Pallet
The Spacelab Pallet is a U-shaped platform for mounting instrumentation, large instruments, experiments requiring exposure to space, and instruments requiring a large field of view, such as telescopes. The pallet has several hard points for mounting heavy equipment. The pallet can be used in single configuration or stacked end to end in double or triple configurations. Up to five pallets can be configured in the Space Shuttle cargo bay by using a double pallet plus triple pallet configurations.The Spacelab Pallet used to transport both Canadarm2 and Dextre to the International Space Station is currently at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, on loan from NASA through the Canadian Space Agency.
A Spacelab Pallet was transferred to the Swiss Museum of Transport for permanent display on 5 March 2010. The Pallet, nicknamed Elvis, was used during the eight-day STS-46 mission, 31 July – 8 August 1992, when ESA astronaut Claude Nicollier was on board Space Shuttle Atlantis to deploy ESA's European Retrievable Carrier scientific mission and the joint NASA/ASI Tethered Satellite System. The Pallet carried TSS-1 in the Shuttle's cargo bay.
Another Spacelab Pallet is on display at the U.S. National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. There was a total of ten space-flown Spacelab pallets.
Igloo
On spaceflights where a habitable module was not flown, but pallets were flown, a pressurized cylinder known as the Igloo carried the subsystems needed to operate the Spacelab equipment. The Igloo was tall, had a diameter of, and weighed. Two Igloo units were manufactured, both by Belgian company SABCA, and both were used on spaceflights. An Igloo component was flown on Spacelab 2, ASTRO-1, ATLAS-1, ATLAS-2, ATLAS-3, and ASTRO-2.A Spacelab Igloo is on display at the James S. McDonnell Space Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in the US.
Instrument Pointing System
The IPS was a gimbaled pointing device, capable of aiming telescopes, cameras, or other instruments. IPS was used on three different Space Shuttle missions between 1985 and 1995. IPS was manufactured by Dornier, and two units were made. The IPS was primarily constructed out of aluminum, steel, and multi-layer insulation.IPS would be mounted inside the payload bay of the Space Shuttle Orbiter, and could provide gimbaled 3-axis pointing. It was designed for a pointing accuracy of less than 1 arcsecond, and three pointing modes including Earth, Sun, and Stellar focused modes. The IPS was mounted on a pallet exposed to outer space in the payload bay.
IPS missions:
- Spacelab 2, a.k.a. STS-51-F launched 1985
- Astro-1, a.k.a. STS-35 launched in 1990
- Astro-2, a.k.a. STS-67 launched in 1995
List of parts
Examples of Spacelab components or hardware:- EVA Airlock
- Tunnel
- Tunnel adapter
- Igloo
- Spacelab module
- * Forward end cone
- * Aft end cone
- * Core segment/module
- * Experiment racks
- * Experiment segment/module
- Electrical Ground Support Equipment
- Mechanical Ground Support Equipment
- Electrical Power Distribution Subsystem
- Command and Data Management Subsystem
- Environmental Control Subsystem
- Instrument Pointing System
- Pallet Structure
- Multi-Purpose Experiment Support Structure
Missions
Spacelab components flew on 22 Space Shuttle missions from November 1983 to April 1998. The Spacelab components were decommissioned in 1998, except the Pallets. Science work was moved to the International Space Station and Spacehab module, a pressurized carrier similar to the Spacelab Module. A Spacelab Pallet was recommissioned in 2000 for flight on STS-99. The "Spacelab Pallet – Deployable 1 with Canadian Dextre " was launched on STS-123. The Spacelab components were used on 41 Shuttle missions in total.The habitable modules were flown on 16 Space Shuttle missions in the 1980s and 1990s. Spacelab Pallet missions were flown 6 times and Spacelab Pallets were flown on other missions 19 times.
| Mission name | Orbiter | Launch date | Spacelab mission name | Pressurized module | Unpressurized modules |
| STS-2 | Columbia | 12 November 1981 | OSTA-1 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-3 | Columbia | 22 March 1982 | OSS-1 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-9 | Columbia | 28 November 1983 | Spacelab 1 | Module LM1 | 1 Pallet |
| STS-41-G | Challenger | 5 October 1984 | OSTA-3 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-51-A | Discovery | 8 November 1984 | Retrieval of 2 satellites | 2 Pallets | |
| STS-51-B | Challenger | 29 April 1985 | Spacelab 3 | Module LM1 | MPESS |
| STS-51-F | Challenger | 29 July 1985 | Spacelab 2 | Igloo | 3 Pallets + IPS |
| STS-61-A | Challenger | 30 October 1985 | Spacelab D1 | Module LM2 | MPESS |
| STS-35 | Columbia | 2 December 1990 | ASTRO-1 | Igloo | 2 Pallets + IPS |
| STS-40 | Columbia | 5 June 1991 | SLS-1 | Module LM1 | |
| STS-42 | Discovery | 22 January 1992 | IML-1 | Module LM2 | |
| STS-45 | Atlantis | 24 March 1992 | ATLAS-1 | Igloo | 2 Pallets |
| STS-50 | Columbia | 25 June 1992 | USML-1 | Module LM1 | EDO |
| STS-46 | Atlantis | 31 July 1992 | TSS-1 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-47 | Endeavour | 12 September 1992 | Spacelab-J | Module LM2 | |
| STS-56 | Discovery | 8 April 1993 | ATLAS-2 | Igloo | 1 Pallet |
| STS-55 | Columbia | 26 April 1993 | Spacelab D2 | Module LM1 | Unique Support Structure |
| STS-58 | Columbia | 18 October 1993 | SLS-2 | Module LM2 | EDO |
| STS-61 | Endeavour | 2 December 1993 | HST SM 01 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-59 | Endeavour | 9 April 1994 | SRL-1 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-65 | Columbia | 8 July 1994 | IML-2 | Module LM1 | EDO |
| STS-64 | Discovery | 9 September 1994 | LITE | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-68 | Endeavour | 30 September 1994 | SRL-2 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-66 | Atlantis | 3 November 1994 | ATLAS-3 | Igloo | 1 Pallet |
| STS-67 | Endeavour | 2 March 1995 | ASTRO-2 | Igloo | 2 Pallets + IPS + EDO |
| STS-71 | Atlantis | 27 June 1995 | Spacelab-Mir | Module LM2 | |
| STS-73 | Columbia | 20 October 1995 | USML-2 | Module LM1 | EDO |
| STS-75 | Columbia | 22 February 1996 | TSS-1R / USMP-3 | 1 Pallet + 2 MPESS + EDO | |
| STS-78 | Columbia | 20 June 1996 | LMS | Module LM2 | EDO |
| STS-82 | Discovery | 21 February 1997 | HST SM 02 | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-83 | Columbia | 4 April 1997 | MSL-1 | Module LM1 | EDO |
| STS-94 | Columbia | 1 July 1997 | MSL-1R | Module LM1 | EDO |
| STS-90 | Columbia | 17 April 1998 | Neurolab | Module LM2 | EDO |
| STS-103 | Discovery | 20 December 1999 | HST SM 03A | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-99 | Endeavour | 11 February 2000 | SRTM | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-92 | Discovery | 11 October 2000 | ISS assembly | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-100 | Endeavour | 19 April 2001 | ISS assembly | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-104 | Atlantis | 12 July 2001 | ISS assembly | 2 Pallets | |
| STS-109 | Columbia | 1 March 2002 | HST SM 03B | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-123 | Endeavour | 11 March 2008 | ISS assembly | 1 Pallet | |
| STS-125 | Atlantis | 11 May 2009 | HST SM 04 | 1 Pallet |
Mission name acronyms:
- ATLAS: Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science
- ASTRO: Not an acronym; abbreviation for "astronomy"
- IML: International Microgravity Laboratory
- LITE: Lidar In-space Technology Experiment
- LMS: Life and Microgravity Sciences
- MSL: Materials Science Laboratory
- SLS: Spacelab Life Sciences
- SRL: Space Radar Laboratory
- TSS: Tethered Satellite System
- USML: U.S. Microgravity Laboratory
- USMP: U.S. Microgravity Payload
File:STS-61-a-patch.png|thumb|upright=1.0|right|The Deutschland-1 orbital space plane flight, funded by West Germany, included over seven tons of German science research equipment.
The first West German mission Deutschland 1 took place in 1985. A second similar mission, Deutschland 2, was first planned for 1988, but due to the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, was delayed until 1993. It became the first German human space mission after German reunification.
The only Japan mission, Spacelab-J, took place in 1992.