
It enables research under zero gravity conditions
Cap Canaveral, 05 February 2008
Following NASA’s confirmation, Columbus, the European space laboratory, is now scheduled to be launched on 7 February 2008 at 20.45 CET aboard the Atlantis space shuttle from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Columbus is Europe's principal contribution to the International Space Station (ISS).
Docking with the ISS is scheduled for Saturday 9 February.
On board Columbus scientists will have the opportunity to conduct experiments in zero gravity – impossible to do on Earth. Astrium has developed and built the Columbus laboratory as industrial prime contractor on behalf of the European Space Agency ESA. Space engineers at Astrium across Europe and particularly in Bremen, Germany have worked on the 13-tonne space station module for just under ten years. Ten European countries have been involved in the development and construction of Columbus. The major partners in this project were Germany (51%), Italy (23%) and France (18%).
The design of the Columbus module draws on the experience that Astrium gained during the development and construction of the Spacelab space laboratory begun in the late 1970s. Spacelab flew aboard a Space Shuttle 22 times in all up to 1998.
The Columbus laboratory is 8 m long, has a diameter of 4.50 m and at launch weighs almost 13 tonnes, which includes the 2.5-tonne payload. In the laboratory there are ten racks. These are internationally standardised payload cabinets in which the experimental systems can be accommodated.
Columbus, which cost €880 million, has been designed for a mission life of at least ten years. The module provides three crew members with sufficient space to carry out research under zero gravity conditions. In the laboratory, scientists will have the opportunity to carry out experiments in a variety of disciplines (e.g. biotechnology, medicine, material sciences, fluid sciences, human sciences) and also experiments in applied technology projects that would not be possible in the Earth's gravity. Materials and fluids behave differently under zero gravity conditions than they do on Earth. In space, for example, metal alloys merge, while under the influence of gravity they do not unite in an optimum manner. The same applies to fluids that blend in space but not on Earth.
Scientific equipment for Columbus
Various payloads have already been integrated in the racks of the Columbus laboratory in readiness for launch:
Contacts for the media
| Rémi Roland | EADS Astrium (FR) |
Tel.: +33 (0)1 77 75 80 37 |
| Jeremy Close | EADS Astrium (UK) |
Tel.: +44 (0)1438 77 38 72 |
| Mathias Pikelj | EADS Astrium (GER) |
Tel.: +49 (0)7545 8 91 23 |
| www.astrium.eads.net |