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Columbus Control Centre inaugurated in Oberpfaffenhofen ![]() Columbus Control Centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany.
On 19 October 2004 ESA and DLR officially inaugurated the Columbus Control Centre. The Centre has been set up under ESA contract in Oberpfaffenhofen at the premises of DLR. The Columbus Control Centre is now ready to take up operations of the European elements of the International Space Station (ISS). ![]() ESA's Columbus Laboratory, Europe's laboratory on the International Space Station (ISS), will become one of the principal manned modules of the ISS when it is launched aboard the US Space Shuttle Atlantis (December 2007). In this pressurised laboratory, European astronauts and their international colleagues will work in a comfortable shirtsleeve environment. It is a state-of-the-art, general-purpose laboratory, accommodating experiments in life sciences, materials processes, technology development, fluid sciences, fundamental physics and other disciplines. Up to 500 experiments will be performed in it every year of its more than 10-year operational life. Measuring 6.7 m long and 4.5 m in diameter, the one-piece module will weigh 9.9 tonnes without its research equipment of 5 tonnes in 10 exchangeable modular racks. Payloads will also be attached on four express pallets on the exterior of the Columbus for technology experiments, Earth observation and space science.It is being developed by a European consortium (41 companies in 14 countries) headed by Daimler Benz Aerospace (DASA). Release date: 22 October 2004 |