The International Space Station is like a big toy house that floats around Earth in space.
Imagine you and your friends built the biggest treehouse ever, it's so big, you could all live in it! That’s what the International Space Station (ISS) is like, but instead of trees, it has rooms where astronauts work, sleep, and even eat snacks. It goes all around Earth every 90 minutes, like a very fast carousel.
How it stays up there
The ISS doesn’t fall down because it's moving really fast, faster than a rocket! It’s like when you swing around on a playground swing: if you go fast enough, you can stay in the air for a while. The ISS is like that super-fast swing, zooming around Earth.
Who lives there
Astronauts from different countries take turns living on the ISS, kind of like sharing your treehouse with friends from other neighborhoods. They do experiments and help us learn more about space, just like you might test how far you can throw a ball or how high you can jump.
Examples
- It's like a giant toy for scientists to study how things behave without gravity.
- A hotel in space that lets people from different countries stay together.
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See also
- What Is the Point of Microgravity?
- What Happens to a Rocket After It Leaves the Atmosphere?
- What are space suits?
- What are life support modules?
- What is Earth’s orbit?