The
Johnson Space Center, charged with the responsibility for
overall management of the international partnership, became
the "hub" of world human space flight. The old rules and
procedures were no longer adequate to deal with breadth and
depth of the integration efforts that had to take place on
every level of development and operations. New templates were
drawn, new concepts explored, and after a few beginning fits
and starts, engineers and managers from partner countries
buckled down and sat across the table from each other
hammering out the planning processes, the technical processes
and the overall management of schedule and work
flow.
The job
entails nothing less than integrating the eventual use of five
different launch vehicles (U.S. shuttle, Russian Soyuz and
Proton, European Ariane, and Japanese H11); linking together
mission control centers in Houston, Huntsville, Moscow,
Montreal, Oberpfaffenhoffen, and Tskuba; training crew and
ground operators in multiple locations on three continents;
and orchestrating more than 1,000 hours of spacewalking to
perform on orbit assembly of 47 major elements (each one
unique and different) and more than 100 minor elements. The
software task of interconnecting 13 major systems (including
life support, guidance, navigation, propulsion,
communications, etc.), including the testing and integration
phases, tops three million lines of computer code, an enormous
task never before accomplished. Conscientious efforts to
maintain and operate the station, which will have the mass of
four shuttle orbiters at assembly complete, were paralleled
with performing research as the building continues. Crews with
diverse backgrounds, language, culture and training
ineluctably rotate and hand off to each other in a display of
international cooperation symbolic of a new era of potential
world peace.
Many
"firsts" were encountered and the list is growing. Among them:
first time a partnership of nations owns and operates a space
station, first time access to previously secret facilities,
first time linkages between training and control centers, the
first time orchestrating of multiple spacecraft traffic, the
first-of-its-kind commercial ventures, including space
tourism, the first time deployment of very large solar arrays,
first time a robot hands off to a robot in human space flight,
the first time spacewalks are conducted without the presence
of the shuttle, and the list grows. Impressive and daunting
characterizes the ongoing effort of ground engineers and crew
who have already battled through main computer failures,
software hiccups and traffic jams.
The
legacy grows, as this incredibly diverse team can already
point with pride to the newest star on the horizon, which by
the end of 2001 will weigh more than 300,000 pounds, with a
habitable volume of a three-bedroom home, inertial guidance
control using electrical power, multiple re-supply and
refueling spacecrafts, multiple docking ports, two airlocks
and operations of the most capable laboratory ever lifted,
U.S. Destiny.
"When the
world looks back on the International Space Station, they will
see one huge team accomplishing an incredible mission," said
NASA Space Station Program Manager Tommy Holloway. "And
through integrity, trust and respecting people, no obstacle,
whether technical or cultural, is preventing this world space
flight team from achieving our goals." |