Last update: 28  November  2008 Send to a friend PrintPrint
 

Spacelab: Europe’s passport to space

25 years of Spacelab

Bremen, 28  November  2008

Spacelab

2 min.  51 sec.

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Spacelab made its inaugural journey into space on 28 November 1983. The development, construction and operation of the space laboratory represented Europe’s first steps in the domain of human spaceflight and paved the way for Astrium’s future role as the leading European space company. When the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) awarded the contract to build a research laboratory for conducting experiments in microgravity to a European consortium in 1973, nobody at the time could have imagined that this heralded a new era of European human spaceflight.

After completing its successful series of expeditions to the moon under the Apollo programme, NASA proposed in 1972 that Europe should take part in future crewed space missions. The Americans set to work on the development of the reusable space shuttle and, in August 1973, a meeting of European science and research ministers voted in favour of embarking on the parallel project of building the Spacelab space laboratory. In June 1974, the European Space Agency (ESA) awarded the contract to build the laboratory to an industrial consortium led by the then ERNO Raumfahrttechnik GmbH, one of the predecessor firms of today’s Astrium. More than 40 major European companies worked together on the project under ERNO’s leadership. Ten European nations helped to finance the Spacelab programme, including West Germany (53.3%), Italy (18%), France (10%) and the United Kingdom (6.3%).

The first complete flight module was delivered to NASA through the intermediary of ESA in 1981. Spacelab made its maiden flight aboard the space shuttle Columbia on 28 November 1983. The physicist and ESA astronaut Ulf Merbold from Stuttgart was on board the flight as a payload specialist.

Two missions flown in 1985 and 1993, code-named D-1 and D-2, were almost exclusively German in origin, with the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in charge of mission control and of monitoring the research flights from its control centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, near Munich. The members of the team included Dutch ESA astronaut Wubbo Ockels and German astronauts Reinhard Furrer and Ernst Messerschmidt (Spacelab D-1) and Ulrich Walter and Hans-Wilhelm Schlegel (Spacelab D-2).

Meanwhile, NASA had placed a direct order with the Spacelab consortium led by Astrium for a second Spacelab flight module and the supply of spare parts. In addition to the total of six flights in a pallet-only configuration – i.e. without the pressurised laboratory module for crew – Spacelab platforms were occasionally introduced which still today form part of many shuttle flights, anchored in the orbiter’s payload bay and carrying equipment and instruments.

The Spacelab era came to an end after 22 flights, the last being the Neurolab mission launched in April 1998 – once again aboard Columbia. As for the majority of earlier missions, Astrium contributed many of the important experiments and other equipment, which it had developed and built on behalf of ESA and the national space agencies.

  • Spacelab flew 22 missions over the course of 15 years
  • Spacelab spent 231 days in space
  • 149 astronauts conducted a total of 720 experiments aboard Spacelab

Your contact:

Dr. Mathias Spude Tel.: +49 (0) 421 539 4411
www.astrium.eads.net