Visit the scenery inside the ISS international space station

The European Aerospace Agency (ESA) has just released an interactive panorama photo that allows us to visit the interior of the International Space Station ISS.

The scene inside the ISS international space station

In it, we can zoom in, zoom out, look up, down, rotate 360 ​​degrees like standing inside ISS. The photo is provided according to the path here (ESA), you click, wait for the download to complete, you can visit.

Picture 1 of Visit the scenery inside the ISS international space station

This landscape within the Columbuas laboratory , one of the most important and important contributors to ISS research work. This module was brought to ISS in 2008 by space shuttle Atlantis and became a permanent module there. To get this product, astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti captured the 75-cubic-meter space in the Columbus module with a full range of equipment for research. About 15 fish-eye photos were taken, then put together into a perfect panorama.

Picture 2 of Visit the scenery inside the ISS international space station

ISS has long been seen as the farthest outpost of humanity, representing the desire to discover and understand. However, only a handful of new people have the privilege of seeing the details of its interior. Therefore, ESA decided to announce the interior image of the ISS and many other modules will be announced soon, more information will be provided so that all residents on Earth have the opportunity to participate. mandarin Although with a computer screen, we cannot feel the gravitylessness, but ESA hopes that the photos not only give a panoramic view of the astronauts' lives on ISS, especially the cramped, full of high-tech equipment above.

Hopefully later ESA and NASA will continue to implement this idea, helping us to understand somewhat the research life of astronauts on the universe. This is just a still picture, maybe in the future when VR technology and other technologies have developed, they will give us panoramic, real-time and interactive images on ISS star? It is worth looking forward to.