
The International Space Station is built by members of the Expedition 56 crew from the Soyuz spacecraft after they sank on 4 October 2018. NASA astronauts Andrew Feustel and Ricky Arnold and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev were executed around the work orbiting laboratory to take photographs of the area. station before returning home after spending 197 days in space. Image courtesy of NASA / Roscosmos

Guinness World Records announced on October 19, 2020, that NASA astronauts Christina Koch (R) and Jessica Meir, who made history with the first female spacecraft on October 18, 2019, are honored for this achievement. with a feature in the Guinness World Records Edition 2021. The historic spacewalk took place at the ISS, where they were working on maintenance and upgrades. Although this was Koch’s fourth spacewalk, it was Meir’s first. Photo by NASA / UPI | License photo

NASA Expedition 64 astronaut Kate Rubins is seen getting her Russian costume Sokol stressed while she and teammates Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergey Ryzhikov from Roscosmos prepare for the Soyuz launch to the ISS on 14 October 2020, at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The trio were launched at 1:45 am EDT to embark on a six-month mission aboard the ISS. Photo by Andrey Shelepin / GCTC / NASA | License photo

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly is delighted to be aboard the ISS following the hatch launch of the Soyuz spacecraft March 28, 2015. Kelly traveled with Expedition 43 Russian cosmonauts Mikhail Kornienko and Gennady Padalka on the launched Soyuz TMA-16M the day before from Baikonur, Kazakhstan. Kelly and Kornienko spent a year in space and returned to Earth on Soyuz TMA-18M in March 2016. Image courtesy of NASA

Astronaut William Shepherd (C), Expedition 1 mission leader, watches as Soyuz cosmonaut Yuri Gidzenko (L) leader and flight engineer cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev add a final touch to the full-length entry suit while lying on a bed of his Johnson Space Center Trainer on May 12, 2000. Expected to return from his space station aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery, the trio took part in a forecast their duties during shuttle descent. Image courtesy of NASA

Kelly cared for two crops at the Veggie Plant Growth Facility during his year in space. Understanding the most effective ways to grow plants in microgravity is a key part of the future trip to Mars. Growing plants in space will provide crew members with fresh food to supplement their diet, as well as a positive effect on confidence and well-being. Image courtesy of NASA

Tim Kopra photographed his breakfast sailing inside a Unity module aboard the ISS on April 16, 2016. In a tweet, he said “#Breakfast taco on #ISS: crushed beans, peeled pork, jack pepper cheese, eggs and salsa on a tortilla. Very Good. “Image courtesy of NASA

Flight controllers at the ISS Mission Control at the Johnson Space Center will monitor systems on board the orbiting laboratory during a number of dynamic events for Expedition 44 on August 10, 2015. Shadows in front of the room show sights camera from two Russian cosmonauts walking into space NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren is seen harvesting lettuce from the veggie experiment that would be the first food grown in space to be eaten. Photo by Bill Stafford / NASA

Expedition 61 crew members, from left to right, NASA flight engineers Meir, Andrew Morgan and Koch with Commander Luca Parmitano of ESA unpacking fresh fruit and other items from a storage bag delivered on board a craft Japan HTV-8 cargo on the ISS on October 7, 2019. Image courtesy of NASA

Kelly spoils a supply of fresh fruit that arrived on the Kounotori 5 H-II (HTV-5) Moving Vehicle on 25 August 2015. Frequent visiting cargo ships carry a small chest of fresh food for crew members on board the ISS. Image courtesy of NASA

NASA astronauts Jeff Williams (shown here) and Rubins successfully installed a new international docking adapter on August 19, 2016, during a 5-hour, 58-minute spacewalk. Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi assisted the pair from inside the space station, while the trio then cleared the Quest aircraft, where they deployed their spacecraft and equipment. Image courtesy of NASA

Koch worked in space 265 miles above the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa aboard the ISS on January 15, 2020. She and Meir made a spacewalk to install new lithium-ion batteries that will storing and distributing power collected from solar arrays on the station’s Port-6 collection structure. Image courtesy of NASA

Astronauts aboard the ISS captured these star orbit images as they orbited the Earth at 17,500 mph on October 3, 2016. Image courtesy of NASA

NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy will begin spaceflight outside the ISS on June 16, 2020. Photo courtesy of NASA

Behnken and Cassidy completed the first of two scheduled spacewalks on June 16, 2020, to replace batteries on one of two power channels on the ISS starboard longboard (S6 Truss). From this image posted by Behnken on Twitter, he said: “Yesterday, @Astro_SEAL dropped this image from our work site on @Space_Station – @SpaceX’s Crew Dragon and @JAXA_en’s HTV in clear view. bad for sight while working. “Photo courtesy of NASA / Twitter | License photo

Koch (L) and Meir will be working on their U.S. space facilities ahead of a spacewalk they have made to install new lithium-ion batteries that store and distribute stored power. collection from solar arrays on the station’s Port-6 collection structure on the ISS on January 15, 2020. Image courtesy of NASA

Commander Peggy Whitson will be working to change the media in BioCell for the OsteoOmics test inside the Microgravity Sciences glove box in the US Destiny lab on the ISS on May 3, 2017. Image courtesy of NASA

Rubins tests a sample for air bubbles before loading it into the biomolecule detector in September 2016. Image courtesy of NASA

Roscosmos cosmonaut and Expedition 63 Flight Engineer Ivan Vagner moves biological samples into science freezer for further storage and analysis aboard the ISS on 7 October 2020. Image courtesy of NASA

Cassidy (L) and Behnken work on U.S. spacecraft inside the Quest ISS aircraft. The two will be carrying spacecraft on June 26 and July 1, 2020, to begin replacing batteries on one of the power channels on the orbiting lab. They replaced aging nickel-hydrogen batteries for one of two power channels on the station’s long-starboard (S6 Truss) battery with new lithium-ion batteries that arrived at the station on a Japanese cargo ship. This was the end of a power upgrade spacecraft that began in January 2017. Image courtesy of NASA | License photo