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Why is Russia Sending New Modules to the Almost Retired ISS?

The ‘Nauka’ module was supposed to be launched to the International Space Station (ISS) 14 years ago. So, its launch on July 21 was an extraordinary event. However, why did Russia keep launching it even though the ISS is going into retirement in 2024?

New Section of ISS

Nauka, which means ‘Science’ in Russian, is Russia’s first module on the ISS in eleven years and Russia’s first private laboratory in space. This module is actually a large spacecraft that once entered orbit can travel independently to the ISS and dock at the space station without the aid of other devices — something the American or European modules cannot do. The NASA module, for example, cannot fly on its own because it looks more like a building. To reach orbit, the module is sent in the cargo hold aboard the shuttle and docked to the ISS with an additional module.

Weighing over 21 tonnes, the Nauka is the heaviest Russian module ever built. The module, which is 13 meters long and 4.2 meters in diameter, was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, on July 21, 2021, and is expected to take eight days to reach the ISS. So, Nauka will arrive at the ISS around 29 July.

Scientific Experiments with Growing Embryos

The main use purpose of Nauka is for science. Currently, the Russian compartment on the ISS has two large modules, namely ‘Zarya’ and ‘Zvezda’, as well as three smaller modules, which are also used to dock space ships.

European Robotic Arm Installation (ERA).

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