FACTBOX: Japan's space laboratory "Kibo"

Tue Mar 11, 2008 2:59am EDT
 
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(Reuters) - The largest of the International Space Station's laboratories will be Japan's Kibo, which means "hope." Here's a look at the complex, the first part of which will arrive at the station on board the space shuttle Endeavour:

*Kibo, which is about the size of a double-decker bus, is so big it needs three shuttle flights for launch and assembly.

*In addition to the main pressurized laboratory, Kibo has its own storage room and an outdoor porch that will have robot arms to tend to experiments in the vacuum of space.

*Areas of research include materials sciences, fluid physics and biomedicine.

*Japan is considering mounting a high-definition television camera outside the complex to beam pictures of Earth to the ground around the clock.

*Kibo will host cultural activities, such as art and orbital dance, in addition to serving as a workplace for science.

*Japan spent 20 years and more than $2.4 billion developing the complex.

(Reporting by Irene Klotz in Cape Canaveral; editing by Michael Christie)

 

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