Friday, November 19, 2010

SESSION 9: EXERCISES FOR DISCUSSION AND FINAL TASK

SESSION 9: EXERCISES FOR DISCUSSION AND FINAL TASK

DISCUSSION: Here is some additional information you may need to read before you come to our discussion on Wednesday:

Go to NASA’s official ISS website to find out more information about the ISS

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html
Here you can read about current missions, crew members and expeditions, watch videos, see images, and find out where to see the ISS in the night sky.
Don´t be afraid to experiment by clicking on all of the different options in front of you, each one is going to take you to a different perspective, all of them fascinating.

THE ISS: THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION
The International Space Station (ISS) is an internationally developed research facility that is being assembled in low Earth orbit. On-orbit construction of the station began in 1998 and is scheduled for completion by late 2011. The station is expected to remain in operation until at least 2015, and likely 2020. With a greater cross-sectional area than that of any previous space station, the ISS can be seen from Earth with the naked eye, and is by far the largest artificial satellite that has ever orbited Earth. The ISS serves as a research laboratory that has a microgravity environment in which crews conduct experiments in biology, chemistry, medicine, physiology and physics, as well as astronomical and meteorological observations. The station provides a unique environment for the testing of the spacecraft systems that will be required for missions to the Moon and Mars. The ISS is operated by Expedition crews of six astronauts and cosmonauts, with the station programme maintaining an uninterrupted human presence in space since the launch of Expedition 1 on 31 October 2000, a total of 10 years and 19 days. The programme thus holds the current record for the longest uninterrupted human presence in space, surpassing the previous record of 3,644 days, set aboard Mir, on 25 October 2010. As of 25 September 2010, the crew of Expedition 25 is aboard.
The ISS is a synthesis of several space station projects that include the American Freedom, the Soviet/Russian Mir-2, the European Columbus and the Japanese Kibō. Budget constraints led to the merger of these projects into a single multi-national programme. The ISS project began in 1994 with the Shuttle-Mir programme, and the first module of the station, Zarya, was launched in 1998 by Russia. Assembly continues, as pressurised modules, external trusses, and other components are launched by American space shuttles, Russian Proton rockets and Russian Soyuz rockets. As of May 2010, the station consists of fourteen pressurised modules and an extensive integrated truss structure (ITS). Power is provided by sixteen solar arrays mounted on the external truss, in addition to four smaller arrays on the Russian modules. The station is maintained at an orbit between 278 km and 460 km altitude, and travels at an average speed of 27,743.8 km/h, completing 15.7 orbits per day.
Operated as a joint project between the five participant space agencies, the station's sections are controlled by mission control centres on the ground operated by the American National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the European Space Agency (ESA), the Russian Federal Space Agency (RKA), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).[21][22] The ownership and use of the space station is established in intergovernmental treaties and agreements that allow the Russian Federation to retain full ownership of its own modules in the Russian Orbital Segment, with the US Orbital Segment, the remainder of the station, allocated between the other international partners. The cost of the station has been estimated by ESA as €100 billion over 30 years, and, although estimates range from 35 to 160 billion US dollars, the ISS is believed to be the most expensive object ever constructed. The financing, research capabilities and technical design of the ISS programme have been criticised because of the high cost. The station is serviced by Soyuz spacecraft, Progress spacecraft, space shuttles, the Automated Transfer Vehicle and the H-II Transfer Vehicle, and has been visited by astronauts and cosmonauts from 15 different nations.

PURPOSE
The International Space Station (ISS) is an internationally developed satellite currently being assembled in Low Earth Orbit. Primarily a research laboratory, the ISS offers an advantage over spacecraft such as NASA's Space Shuttle because it is a long-term platform in the space environment, where extended studies are conducted. The presence of a permanent crew affords the ability to monitor, replenish, repair, and replace experiments and components of the spacecraft itself. Scientists on Earth have swift access to the crew's data and can modify experiments or launch new ones, benefits generally unavailable on specialised unmanned spacecraft.
Crews, who fly expeditions of several months duration, conduct scientific experiments each day (approximately 160 man-hours a week). As of the conclusion of Expedition 15, 138 major science investigations had been conducted on the ISS. Scientific findings, in fields from basic science to exploration research, are published every month.

The ISS provides a location in the relative safety of Low Earth Orbit to test spacecraft systems that will be required for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars. This provides experience in the maintenance, repair, and replacement of systems on-orbit, which will be essential in operating spacecraft further from Earth. Mission risks are reduced, and the capabilities of interplanetary spacecraft are advanced.

Part of the crew's mission is educational outreach and international cooperation. The crew of the ISS provide opportunities for students on Earth by running student-developed experiments, making educational demonstrations, and allowing for student participation in classroom versions of ISS experiments, NASA investigator experiments, and ISS engineering activities. The ISS programme itself, with the international cooperation that it represents, allows 14 nations to live and work together in space, providing lessons for future multi-national missions.

PREPARING A DISCUSSION IS FUNDAMENTAL:


THIS MUST BE DONE IN TWO DIRECTIONS:
FIRST, YOU NEED TO LEARN NEW VOCABULARY AND EXPRESSIONS THAT YOU WILL HAVE TO USE FOR THE DISCUSSION.
SECONDLY, YOU HAVE TO PREPARE THE TOPIC BY LOOKING UP INFORMATION IN THE INTERNET, BOOKS, ENCYCLOPAEDIAS.
THIS WAY YOU WILL FEEL MUCH MORE CONFIDENT AND AT THE SAME TIME YOU WILL HAVE MUCH MORE TO TALK ABOUT.

FINAL TASK:

HERE IS ONE FINAL TASK THAT YOU MAY DO IN ORDER TO COVER THE FOUR SKILLS YOU SHOULD FOCUS ON WHEN LEARNING A LANGUAGE: LISTENING, READING, SPEAKING AND WRITING.

Write a composition and leave it in the blog as a comment to Session 9, I will edit it in the blog so that everybody can learn from other people´s opinions. Choose one of these two options:
  • How can working on the ISS affect you physically and mentally?
  • Spending so much money on Space Projects is well worth it. Express your opinion.

1 comment:

  1. Nowadays we often use many things which are very usefulness. Many of them have been used by astronauts and cosmonauts in the International Space Station. All this sort of invents are proved in the space station, and finally they are useful for us.


    Some people believe that this sort of researches are very expensive, so it might be true. Many countries spend a lot of money in these experiments every year. It is not only the money they cost, but also the risk that astronauts and cosmonauts run all the time they are in the outer space.


    However, we are used to living with this new stuff. For example, computer is an invent which was developed to transmit and process information from the space, and we have been using in our routine daily life since then. There are many other examples, such as, TV satellite dish-which was developed by NASA to correct errors in the signal coming from spacecraft-. Medical imaging-NASA developed ways to process signals from spacecraft to produce clearer images-. Ear Thermometer-instead of measuring temperature using a column of mercury( which expands as it heats up) this thermometer has a lens like a camera and detects infrared energy, which we feel as heat. The warmer something is, the more infrared energy it puts up. This energy was originally developed to detect the birth of stars-, and many other examples that we could comment.


    In conclusion, scientists make a great labour in the outer space. They develop new tools that they are used by us afterwards, so in my opinion, all the money they spend in their researches will be rather worth in our life style in the future.

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