Location
Howard Johnson Plaza-Hotel
Start Date
28-4-1998 2:00 PM
Description
The International Space Station, as the largest international civil program in history, features unprecedented technical, managerial, and international complexity. Seven international partners and participants encompassing fifteen countries are involved in the ISS. Each partner is designing, developing and will be operating separate pieces of hardware, to be integrated on-orbit into a single orbital station. Mission control centers, launch vehicles, astronauts/ cosmonauts, and support services will be provided by multiple partners, but functioning in a coordinated, integrated fashion. A number of major milestones have been accomplished to date, including the construction of major elements of flight hardware, the development of operations and sustaining engineering centers, astronaut training, and seven Space Shuttle/Mir docking missions. International partner contributions and levels of participation have been baselined. Astronauts and cosmonauts are in training. In short, the International Space Station is well on its way to its first launch and being a fully-operation program.
Paper Session I-B - The International Space Station Partners: Background and Current Status
Howard Johnson Plaza-Hotel
The International Space Station, as the largest international civil program in history, features unprecedented technical, managerial, and international complexity. Seven international partners and participants encompassing fifteen countries are involved in the ISS. Each partner is designing, developing and will be operating separate pieces of hardware, to be integrated on-orbit into a single orbital station. Mission control centers, launch vehicles, astronauts/ cosmonauts, and support services will be provided by multiple partners, but functioning in a coordinated, integrated fashion. A number of major milestones have been accomplished to date, including the construction of major elements of flight hardware, the development of operations and sustaining engineering centers, astronaut training, and seven Space Shuttle/Mir docking missions. International partner contributions and levels of participation have been baselined. Astronauts and cosmonauts are in training. In short, the International Space Station is well on its way to its first launch and being a fully-operation program.
Comments
Session Chairman: William V. Bates, Chief of Staff ISS Program Office, Johnson Space Center
Session Organizer: Ellen Prince Brown