Members of the U.S. Navy Blue Angels fly over the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan as part of the 25th annual Fleet Week celebration in New York, May 23, 2012.  REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

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Shreen Mohammad sits with other recruits during a military exercise at the Kabul Military Training Center (KMTC) in Kabul March 28, 2012. A landmark NATO summit in Chicago endorsed an exit strategy that calls for handing control of Afghanistan to its own security forces by the middle of next year but left questions unanswered about how to prevent a slide into chaos and a Taliban resurgence after allied troops are gone. Picture taken March 28, 2012.   REUTERS/Omar Sobhani (AFGHANISTAN - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY SOCIETY) ATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 18 OF 27 FOR PACKAGE 'AFGHAN ARMY RECRUIT'

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FACTBOX: Lab a centerpiece of Europe's space program

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Thu Feb 7, 2008 3:44pm EST

(Reuters) - The Columbus laboratory aboard the U.S. space shuttle Atlantis is the European Space Agency's primary contribution to the $100 billion International Space Station program. Atlantis lifted off on Thursday from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Here's a look at the lab:

* Columbus cost 1.3 billion euros ($1.9 billion). The cylindrical lab is 23 feet long and nearly 15 feet

in diameter.

* The lab was launched with five experiment racks including a biology laboratory for cell and tissue studies, a fluid science lab and a facility to study effects of weightlessness on the human body.

*It has room for 16 racks and three crewmembers to work on experiments.

* Columbus has hookups for four external experiments. The first two to fly are the Solar Monitoring Observatory and the European Technology Exposure Facility for materials science studies.

* The experiments can be operated remotely by scientists at nine centers in Europe and coordinated by the Columbus Control Centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany.

(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Jim Loney and Xavier Briand)

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