请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 space station
释义

space station


space station

n. A structure equipped to support a human crew and designed to remain in space for an extended period and serve as a base for research, repair of satellites, or other space-related activities. All space stations built to date orbit around Earth.

space station

n (Astronautics) any large manned artificial satellite designed to orbit the earth during a long period of time thus providing a base for scientific and medical research in space and a construction site, launch pad, and docking arrangements for spacecraft. Also called: space platform or space laboratory

space′ sta`tion


n. a manned spacecraft or satellite orbiting the earth for an extended period of time, used for assembling and serving other spacecraft, for observation and research, etc. [1940–45]
Thesaurus
Noun1.space station - a manned artificial satellite in a fixed orbit designed for scientific researchspace station - a manned artificial satellite in a fixed orbit designed for scientific researchspace laboratory, space platformartificial satellite, orbiter, satellite - man-made equipment that orbits around the earth or the moon
Translations

space station


space station

or

space platform,

artificial earth satellite, usually manned, that is placed in a fixed orbit and can serve as a base for astronomical observations; zero-gravity materials processing; satellite assembly, refueling, and repair; or, possibly, as weapons platforms. The first space station was the Soviet Salyut 1, launched in Apr., 1971. The Soyuz 10 spacecraft docked with this station, but the crew did not enter it; two months later the cosmonauts aboard the Soyuz 11 spacecraft docked and entered Salyut 1, remaining aboard for 22 days. By 1982 five more Salyut space stations had been orbited successfully, two of them for military purposes. By rotating the crews regularly, the Soviets were able to staff the stations for extended periods. All the Salyut space stations have decayed and are no longer in orbit.

During this period the United States launched its only true space station. Called Skylab, it was placed in orbit in May, 1973. Skylab housed three three-person crews, the last remaining aboard for 84 days, which at that time was a record for continuous residency in space. Among the tasks accomplished by the Skylab astronauts were biomedical studies to evaluate the effects of weightlessness, photographing the earth to monitor volcanoes and earthquake faults, astronomical observations of optical sources (including extensive studies of Comet Kohoutek), and materials-processing activities such as brazing and welding (to see how they were affected by the lack of gravity). Skylab fell to earth in July, 1979, showering debris over uninhabited parts of Australia and the Indian Ocean.

The Soviet Union launched the core module of the Mir space station in Feb., 1986. It was enlarged several times so that it could accommodate a crew of up to six cosmonauts. The Mir program was enhanced by having international teams conduct experiments at the station; Afghanistan, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Japan, Syria and the United States, in addition to Russia and other nations that were formerly part of the Soviet Union, participated. In 1995, Mir cosmonaut Valery Polyakov set an endurance record of nearly 439 days in space, eclipsing the previous record of 326 days set in 1987 by Yuri Romanenko (also while on Mir). In Aug., 1999, its extended 13-year mission concluded, Mir was abandoned. During its lifetime, it orbited the earth 86,331 times and was home to 104 people, including 42 Russian cosmonauts and 7 American astronauts. In Mar., 2001, Mir fell to earth, the largest spacecraft (143 tons/130 metric tons) ever to decay, showering an estimated 1,500 fragments of 44 lb (20 kg) or more over an uninhabited area 120 mi (193 km) wide by 3,600 mi (5795 km) long in the South Pacific.

The United States, Japan, Canada, Brazil, Russia, and members of the European Space AgencyEuropean Space Agency
(ESA), multinational agency dedicated to the promotion, for exclusively peaceful purposes, of cooperation among European states in space research and technology.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (ESA) have contributed to the development of the International Space Station (ISS), which has been assembled in space since 1998. Each partner has contributed a portion of the complex. The first element, Zarya (the control module), was orbited by a Russian Proton rocket in Nov., 1998. A month later the U.S. space shuttlespace shuttle,
reusable U.S. space vehicle (1981–2011). Developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and officially known as the Space Transportation System (STS), it was the world's first reusable spacecraft that carried human beings into earth
..... Click the link for more information.
 Endeavour initiated the first assembly sequence of the ISS, linking the Unity module, a passageway that connects living and work areas of the station, to Zarya. In July, 2000, the Russian-built Zvezda service module was mated with the two existing components. The first permanent crew—two Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut—began living aboard the ISS in Nov., 2000; it now supports a crew of up to seven. The ISS with its modules and solar arrays now spans 357.5 ft by 167.3 ft (109 m by 51 m), or roughly the size of the U.S. football field; its mass is nearly a million pounds (454,000 kg). Its construction has involved more than 110 space flights by five space vehicles (including the space shuttle, the Russian Soyuz rocket, and the Russian Proton rocket) to deliver the various ISS components to earth orbit. Assembly of the more than 100 components has utilized a combination of human spacewalks and robot technologies. Components added since 2000 include the Destiny Laboratory (2001, United States), Pirs Docking Compartment (2001, Russia), and Columbus laboratory (2008, ESA). The station's fourth and final set of solar panels was erected in 2009. The ISS has been resupplied by European, Japanese, Russian, and U.S. spaceflights.

In Sept., 2011, China placed Tiangong 1 [heavenly palace], an experimental prototype space station, in orbit, and it was subsequently visited (2011–13) by three spaceflights (Shenzhou 8–10), the last two of which had crews; all three Shenzhou spacecraft docked with Tiangong 1. Tiangong 2, a second experimental space station designed as a testing laboratory and precursor to a more permanent space station, was launched in Sept., 2016. The following month, Shenzhou 11 docked with the station for a monthlong mission.

Bibliography

See P. Bizony, Island in the Sky: The ISS (1996); D. M. Harland, The Mir Space Station: Precursor to Space Colonization (1997); M. D. Cole, International Space Station: A Space Mission (1999).

space station

An orbiting space laboratory, with a lifetime of several years or more, on which people can live and work in controlled but weightless conditions. Crews are ferried to and from the station and remain on board either for short periods or on a continuous or near continuous rota basis. The first Soviet Salyut space station was launched in 1971, and the one-off US Skylab station went into space in 1973. There followed six more Salyut stations before 1986, when the Soviet Union launched Mir, a modular space station that functioned almost continuously until it was abandoned in 1999. In its later years it was a focus of international cooperations, especially between Russia and the United States. It fell to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere, in 2001. The International Space Station (ISS) is a venture involving contributions from 16 countries. Assembly of the ISS began in 1998, and the first long-stay crew took up residence there in Nov. 2000.

Space Station

 

a heavy artificial satellite that functions for a long time in earth, lunar, or planetary orbits. A space station may have a crew of astronauts or may operate automatically.

The function of a space station is to carry out a number of scientific and practical tasks—the study of near-earth space and the earth from the orbit of an artificial earth satellite; the conduct of meteorological, astronomical, radioastronomical, and other observations; the study of problems of navigation; the conduct of biomedical experiments; and the study of behavior of materials and equipment under conditions of space flight. Space stations may also be bases for orbital assembly of heavy spacecraft designed for flight to other planets in the solar system.

The possibility and advisability of creating space stations were scientifically substantiated in the early 20th century in the works of K. E. Tsiolkovskii and Iu. V. Kondratiuk (Russia), H. Oberth (Germany), and Guido von Pirquet and Hermann Noordung (Austria). The creation of space stations and the support of their prolonged functioning in orbit entailed the solution of a number of complex scientific, engineering, and biomedical problems. One of the most important problems is the docking of the spacecraft in orbit. The first manual docking was carried out on Mar. 16, 1966, by the crew of the manned American Gemini 8 spacecraft with an Agena rocket. Automatic docking without direct participation of astronauts was first accomplished on Oct. 30, 1967, in an earth orbit by the Soviet Cosmos 186 and Cosmos 188 artificial earth satellites. The experiment was repeated on Apr. 15, 1968, during the flight of the unmanned Cosmos 212 and Cosmos 213 earth satellites. The first experimental space station was formed and functioned briefly in an earth orbit on Jan. 16, 1969, after the automatic rendezvous and manual docking of manned Soyuz spaceships. By 1971, subsequent launches of Soyuz spaceships had made possible solution of the fundamental problems connected with setting up long-term space stations (Salyut). By 1973 a similar problem had been solved in the USA (Skylab).

The period of active operation in orbit, the crew size, orbital parameters, and the weight and dimensions of a space station depend on its function. The design of a space station is determined primarily by the assembly methods. There are two possible methods. In the first, the station is completely assembled on earth and, ready to carry out assignments, is placed in satellite orbit by a booster rocket. The weight and volume of the station are limited by the thrust of the booster rocket, and therefore the method is suitable for the assembly of stations up to a few dozen tons, such as Salyut and Skylab. In the second method, assembly is accomplished in earth orbit from several independent modules, sections, elements, or spacecraft that are placed in orbit by several boosters. After final assembly and testing in orbit, the station is ready to carry out the entire range of assigned missions. This method makes it possible to set up stations of any required weight and volume, with various dimensions, by using existing booster rockets to place the components in orbit. This is particularly important in sending space stations to the moon and other planets in the solar system. In this case an aborted launch of one of the modules does not cause failure of the program for establishing the station. In both cases the crew can be orbited on board the station (or an element thereof) or can be delivered to the station by transport vehicles, which are launched from earth space centers as necessary and rendezvous and dock with the station.

The flight of a manned space station requires solution of the problems of overcoming the prolonged effect of weightlessness on the human organism, protection from radiation and mi-crometeorites, and provision of reliability and adequate service life of on-board systems and equipment.

The time spent by astronauts in a space station with changing crews is a few weeks or months—for example, the third Skylab crew remained in orbit 84 days. The conditions necessary for normal vital activity and for the conduct of a number of scientific experiments, including biomedical experiments that make it possible to investigate human adaptability to the conditions of weightlessness, are created on board the station. An exercise bicycle, a treadmill, and weighted clothing are used for this purpose. On longer flights, the problem can be solved by other methods. For example, artificial partial gravity may be created by rotating the station or elements of it with respect to the center of gravity.

The provision of protection for the crew against cosmic radiation acquires great importance, especially on long flights. The methods used include both passive protection, which is provided by shielding the station compartments with materials capable of absorbing charged particles that are dangerous to the organism, and active shielding, which is based on the possibility of changing the direction of the flux of charged particles by means of electrostatic or electromagnetic fields.

Meteor protection (with respect to space stations in earth orbit) is provided by outer shields; materials with good anti-impact properties, such as titanium, magnesium, and beryllium, are used for the skin, which is of the honeycomb type, with gaps between the layers. The use of self-sealing materials to cover the body is promising.

The solution of problems associated with the provision of reliability and service life of on-board systems and equipment, especially for prolonged active existence of the space station, begins on earth under conditions as close as possible to those of space flight. All systems and equipment undergo prolonged and thorough testing on the ground.

With the expansion of the frontiers of space, the sphere of activity of space stations is changing qualitatively. For example, the creation of lunar space stations (proposed by Iu. V. Kondratiuk) with a virtually unlimited stay in orbit, which would perform the role of supply bases, will facilitate flights to other planets in the solar system.

REFERENCES

Tsiolkovskii, K. E. Sobr. soch., vols. 1–4. Moscow, 1951–64.
Kondratiuk, Iu. V. Zavoevanie mezhplanetnykh prostranstv, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1947.
Ot kosmicheskikh korablei k orbital’nym stantsiiam, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1971.
“Saliut” na orbite. Moscow, 1973.
Ordway, F. I. “Istoriia, evoliutsiia i dostoinstva proektov orbital’nykh stantsii, vydvigavshikhsia v SShA i Zapadnoi Evrope” In the collection Iz istorii aviatsii i kosmonavtiki, nos. 17–18. Moscow, 1972.

G. A. NAZAROV

space station

[′spās ‚stā·shən] (aerospace engineering) An autonomous, permanent facility in space for the conduct of scientific and technological research, earth-oriented applications, and astronomical observations.
AcronymsSeesafe sex

space station


  • noun

Synonyms for space station

noun a manned artificial satellite in a fixed orbit designed for scientific research

Synonyms

  • space laboratory
  • space platform

Related Words

  • artificial satellite
  • orbiter
  • satellite
随便看

 

英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/3/20 12:59:46