International space station

The International Space Station 3 June 1999 as seen from the US space shuttle Discovery as the shuttle does a fly around after undocking with the station. The Discovery and her seven person crew is scheduled to wind up the ten day mission to the ISS with a landing in Florida early 06 June 1999.Photo: AFP/NASA

Curious Kids: How big is the International Space Station?

The International Space Station (ISS) is the biggest human-made thing in space and the third-brightest object in the sky.

International space station

The International Space Station 3 June 1999 as seen from the US space shuttle Discovery as the shuttle does a fly around after undocking with the station. The Discovery and her seven person crew is scheduled to wind up the ten day mission to the ISS with a landing in Florida early 06 June 1999.Photo: AFP/NASA


How big is the International Space Station? – Isla, aged 7, Killarney, Australia.


It’s so big you can see it in the night sky without a telescope or binoculars. It’s 109 metres long and 75 metres wide – about the same size as a soccer field. It weighs 420 tonnes, about the same as 280 cars.

The space station has 932 cubic metres of total space, with about two-thirds used for equipment and storage. Only one-third of it is “habitable”, meaning it can be used for humans to live in.

All that may sound big for only six astronauts to live in, but it’s actually quite cramped.

Itty bitty living space

The bedroom for each astronaut is a small cabin, with a sleeping bag clipped into the cabin wall to stop them floating around when they sleep. The cabin also holds their computer and has room for a few other personal items.

There are also science labs where the crew can do research. There are up to 2 400 research investigations going on during an expedition so the labs can get very crowded. The crew members have to make room for each other and all their equipment.

ISS International space station 1200 x 858
Inside a lab on the ISS. Photo: NASA.

Made in space

Did you know it took 42 space flights to assemble the main pieces of the space station?

On the outside there are eight solar panels that power the space station. Together, they create up to 90 kilowatts of electricity – enough to power 13 Australian houses!

The space station also allows six spaceships to be connected to it at once. These spaceships bring people and supplies from either Russia, Japan or the United States of America.

You can read more facts and figures about the ISS here.

International space station
A view from the US space shuttle Atlantis 10 September 2000 shows the International Space Station (Top-Bot) Progress Supply Vehicle, Zvezda Module, Zarya Module and Unity Module prior to docking with the shuttle. Atlantis and her seven-person international crew will be docked for several days of supplying, servicing and raising the altitude of the International Space Station. Photo: AFP/NASA

Watching the Earth

The view from inside the space station is spectacular. There is a special viewing window called a cupola. It allows one astronaut at a time to view and take photographs of Earth.

The station orbits Earth 16 times every 24 hours. Imagine being able to see 16 sunrises and sunsets every 24 hours. What an amazing sight it would be.

Also read – This is what Earth looks like from the International Space Station [photos]


Kevin Orrman-Rossiter, PhD Research Student, History & Philosophy of Science, University of Melbourne. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au.