ZVEZDA (ISS)


'''Zvezda''' (, meaning "star"), DOS-8, also known as the ''Zvezda Service Module'', is a component of the International Space Station (ISS). It was the third module launched to the station, and provides some of the station's life support systems, as well as living quarters for two crewmembers. It is the structural and functional center of the Russian portion of the station - the Russian Orbital Segment.
The module was manufactured by S.P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia and is currently the only fully Russian-built and funded module besides ''Pirs''. (''Zarya'' was built by Russia, but was funded and is owned by the United States). ''Zvezda'' was launched on a Proton rocket on July 12, 2000 and docked with the ''Zarya'' module on July 26. The rocket used for the launch was one of the first to carry advertising; it was emblazoned with the logo of the fast food chain Pizza Hut, for which the company paid US$1 million.

Contents
Origins
Design
Connection to the ISS
Launch risks
References

Origins


Zvezda Service Module under construction



The basic structural frame of ''Zvezda'', known as "DOS-8", was initially built in the mid-1980s to be the core of the ''Mir-2'' space station. This means that ''Zvezda'' is similar in layout to the core module (DOS-7) of the ''Mir'' space station. It was in fact labeled as "''Mir''-2" for quite some time in the factory. Its design lineage thus extends back to the original Salyut stations. The spaceframe was completed in February 1985 and major internal equipment was installed by October 1986.

Design


Zvezda consists of a cylindrical "Work Compartment" where the crews work and live, a cylindrical "Transfer Chamber" which has one docking port, an unpressurised "Assembly Compartment" surrounding the Transfer Chamber, and a spherical "Transfer Compartment" with three docking ports.
The 'Transfer Compartment' attaches to the Zarya module, and has docking ports intended for the Science Power Platform and the Universal Docking Module. Currently the lower port contains the Russian Docking Compartment and the other is empty. It could be used as an airlock; however, if the hatch failed, it would be impossible to travel to the rest of the station, so this capability has never been used.
The 'Assembly Compartment' holds external equipment such as thrusters, antennas, and propellant tanks.
The 'Transfer Chamber' is equipped with automatic docking equipment and is used to service Soyuz and Progress spacecraft.
''Zvezda'' contains sleeping quarters for two cosmonauts, a NASA-provided treadmill and a bicycle for exercise, toilet and other hygiene facilities and a galley with a refrigerator and freezer. It contains the primary Russian computers for guidance and navigation. It has a total of 14 windows -- three 9-inch diameter windows in the forward Transfer Compartment, a 16-inch window in the Working Compartment, one in each crew compartment, and several more. It also contains the Elektron system that electrolyzes condensed humidity and waste water to provide hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen is expelled into space and the oxygen is used for breathing air. The condensed water and the waste water can be used for drinking in an emergency, but ordinarily fresh water from Earth is used. There are 16 small thrusters and two large thrusters for propulsion, and eight batteries for storing power.
The Elektron system has required significant maintenance work, having failed several times and requiring the crew to use Solid Fuel Oxygen Generator canisters (commonly called "Oxygen Candles", which were the cause of a fire on ''Mir'') when it has been broken for extended amounts of time. It also contains the Vozdukh system to remove carbon dioxide from the air. ''Zvezda'' has been criticized for being excessively noisy and the crew has been observed wearing earplugs inside of it.

Connection to the ISS


The International Space Station as seen during STS-106, following the arrival of the Zvezda Service Module.

On July 26, 2000, ''Zvezda'' became the third component of the ISS when it docked at the aft port of ''Zarya''. (''Zarya'' had already been attached to the U.S. ''Unity'' module.) Later in July, the computers aboard ''Zarya'' handed over ISS commanding functions to computers on ''Zvezda''.[4]
On Sept. 11, 2000, two members of the STS-106 Space Shuttle crew completed final
connections between ''Zvezda'' and ''Zarya'': during a 6 hour, 14 minute extravehicular activity (EVA),astronaut Ed Lu and cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko connected nine cables between ''Zvezda'' and ''Zarya'', including four power cables, four video and data cables and a fiber-optic telemetry cable.[5] The next day, STS-106 crewmembers floated into ''Zvezda'' for the first time,
at 12:20 a.m. CDT on Sept. 12.[6]
''Zvezda'' provided early living quarters, a life support system, a communication system, electrical power distribution, a data processing system, a flight control system, and a propulsion system. These quarters and systems are to be supplemented by future ISS components.
The two main engines on ''Zvezda'' can be used to raise the station's altitude. This was done on 25 April, 2007. This was the first time the engines had been fired since ''Zvezda'' arrived in 2000.[7]

Launch risks


Due to Russian financial problems, ''Zvezda'' was launched with no backup and no insurance. Due to this risk, NASA had constructed an Interim Control Module in case it was delayed significantly or destroyed on launch. However, without the Service Module, it would be several more flights before the ISS would be able to support a permanent crew.

References


1. The ISS to Date
2. International Space Station Status Report #06-7
3. NASA - Zvezda Service Module
4.
STS-106
5.
STS-106 Report # 07
6.
STS-106 Report # 10
7.
International Space Station Status Report: SS07-23


This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves