ISS Traveling Exhibit on Display at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex

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03.07.05

Tracy Young
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
(Phone: 321/867-2468)

Andrea Farmer/Jillian Dick
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, Fla.
Phone: (321/449-4318/4273)

RELEASE: 22-05

ISS TRAVELING EXHIBIT ON DISPLAY AT KENNEDY SPACE CENTER VISITOR COMPLEX

NASA is bringing the excitement of human space flight to the Kennedy 
Space Center Visitor Complex, offering an exciting new interactive 
exhibit that puts visitors "inside" the International Space Station 
-- the world's only orbiting laboratory. Through March 31, visitors 
will board "Space Station Imagination" to catch a glimpse of how 
astronauts live and work in space. 

The Vision for Space Exploration includes returning the Space Shuttle 
safely to flight, completing the International Space Station, 
developing and testing a new exploration vehicle, and embarking on 
extended human missions to the Moon. NASA will return to the Moon as 
a first step to preparing for further exploration in the Solar System 
and demonstrating our ability to live and work on another world. 

"Space Station Imagination" is comprised of two 48-foot trailers 
linked to form two modules of the Space Station: the Habitation 
Module, or living quarters, where the astronauts sleep, eat and tend 
to personal hygiene, and the Laboratory Module where multiple 
microgravity experiments are performed. Visitors can see examples of 
features of the habitation and laboratory modules. 

The Station is a critical steppingstone for the Vision for Space 
Exploration. NASA's research efforts on orbit focus on the effects of 
microgravity on the human body. This will help us learn how to 
prepare astronauts and spacecraft for long-duration missions to the 
Moon, Mars and beyond. 

Animatronics "astronaut" Dr. Emily greets visitors as she awakens to 
start her day onboard this international orbiting laboratory. 
Displays show how a space toilet and shower work like vacuum cleaners 
with very little gravity, as well as how astronauts eat and sleep 
aboard the Station. A centrifuge displays how scientists might study 
the effects of varying levels of gravity on plants, animals and 
materials. 

Using actual footage from the Station, three short video presentations 
entertain and inform viewers with the story of human space 
exploration and the International Space Station program. The complete 
tour of the exhibit takes about 20 minutes. 

The exhibit is accessible to people with disabilities. Tours of the 
exhibit are included with admission to Kennedy Space Center Visitor 
Complex. 

For more information on the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, call 
(321) 449-4444 or visit: 

http://www.KennedySpaceCenter.com 

For more information on the Space Station Imagination exhibit visit: 

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/programs/exhibits/trailers/index.html

	
-end-



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