00:00On this day in space.
00:04On November 20th, 1998, the first piece of the International Space Station
00:08launched into orbit. The 42,000 pound module is called
00:12Zarya, and it's about the size of a tour bus. Zarya launched aboard a Russian
00:16proton rocket. Two weeks later, the STS-88 shuttle mission brought
00:20the Unity module into space. The STS-88 astronauts connected
00:24the two modules in orbit. Zarya was built by the Russians, but it
00:28was paid for by the United States. NASA contracted a Russian company to
00:32build it for half the price of what the American company Lockheed Martin would have charged.
00:36These days, Zarya is mainly used for storage and for external fuel
00:40tanks. The module also has docking ports for Russian Progress cargo
00:44ships and Soyuz spacecraft that carry crews to and from the space station.
00:48Today, the International Space Station is about the size of a football field, and
00:52typically hosts up to six crew members. But back then, it was a pretty tight
00:56squeeze. And that's what happened on this day in space.
01:00Music
01:04Music
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