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Facility/Payload OverviewThe EXPRESS Rack are multipurpose payload rack systems that store and supports experiments aboard the International Space Station. The EXPRESS Rack system supports science payloads in any discipline by providing structural interfaces, power, data, cooling, water and other items needed to operate science experiments in space.
Facility Manager(s)Information Pending
Facility DeveloperMarshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL and Boeing, Huntsville, AL
Sponsoring AgencyNational Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Expeditions Assigned|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|15|16|17|18|19|20|21|22|
Previous ISS MissionsInformation Pending
With standardized hardware interfaces and streamlined approach, the EXPRESS Rack (ER) enables quick, simple integration of multiple payloads aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The system is comprised of elements that remain on ISS, as well as elements that travel back and forth between ISS and Earth via the Space Shuttle and other carriers. ER's remain onorbit continually. Experiments are exchanged in and out of the ER as needed remaining on ISS for three months to several years, depending on the experiment's time requirements.
Payloads within an ER can operate independently of each other, allowing for differences in temperature, power levels and schedules. The ER provides stowage, power, data, command and control, video, water cooling, air cooling, vacuum exhaust, and nitrogen supply to payloads. Each ER is housed in an International Standard Payload Rack (ISPR), a refrigerator-size container that acts as the ER exterior shell. Each rack can be divided into segments; as large as half the entire rack or as small as a breadbox.
EXPRESS Rack 5 was launched on 7A.1 in August 2001 during ISS Expedition 3.
Experiments contained within ERs may be controlled by the ISS crew or remotely by the Payload Rack Officer (PRO) on-duty at the Payload Operations and Integration Center at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, AL. Linked by computer to all payload racks aboard ISS, the PRO routinely checks rack integrity, temperature control and the proper working conditions of ISS research payloads.
ER was developed to provide ISS accommodations for small subrack payloads. ER accepts ISS middeck locker type payloads and International Subrack Interface Standard (ISIS) Drawer payloads, allowing previously flown payloads an opportunity to transition to the International Space Station. The ER system also includes transportation racks to transport payloads to and from the ISS, Suitcase Simulators to allow a payload developer to verify ISS power and data interfaces at the development site, Functional Checkout Units to allow Payload checkout at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) prior to launch, and trainer racks for the astronauts to learn how to operate the ERs prior to flight. Standard hardware and software interfaces provided by the ER simplify the analytical and physical integration processes and facilitate simpler ISS payload development. The ER has also formed the basis for the U.S. Life Sciences payload racks.
Information Pending
NASA Image: ISS009E06472 - EXPRESS Rack 5, in the Destiny/U.S. Laboratory, lower stowage compartments and Maintenance Work Area table during ISS Expedition 9.
NASA Image: ISS006E20960 - View of Expedite the Processing of Experiments to the Space Station (EXPRESS) Rack 5, LAB1S5 and MSS-1 in the U.S. Laboratory/Destiny during Expedition 6. Visible are the ARCTIC Supply, High Rate Frame Multiplexer, and PCS-1 on laptop computer.