As a man who prides himself on knowing "a little bit about many things", I knew NOTHING about the ISS. I felt kinda embarrassed about that deficiency, which is why I am very, VERY grateful to you, Jared, for taking on this enormous task!! Outstanding presentation and easy-to-understand detail. So impressed, and so appreciated. My wife & I love ALL of your presentations!
You should also learn about the Salyut space stations. Russia's single-module stations that would eventually become the core module of Mir, and then the Zvezda Command Module on the ISS. Also don't neglect US's Skylab as well. Its 50th Anniversary was just this year ^_^
@@Shady-Socks73 While Skylab was the first US space station, Russia beat us to it by a few years with Salyut 1. Unfortunately only one crew visited that station,... and even more unfortunately, all three died on re-entry when an oxygen seal ruptured and vented all their air into space. While there was a Salyut 2 and 3, they are a separate lineage. Salyut 4 is technically the next in line after Salyut 1, and had two successful crews. Salyut 6 is where things started getting interesting, as it was the first station to ever use two separate docking ports, and be able to actually be refueled in flight. It would have five extended duration visits (longer than two months) and a dozen shorter week-long visits. Salyut 7 was essentially a repeat of 6, but was in orbit while the first module of Mir was launched Speaking of Mir, the reason its important to the story is because the core module of Mir was essentially Salyut 8, as it was of the same design. All of the additional modules were based on a cargo extension originally designed for Salyut 7, which they referred to as an FGB. And why is the FGB important? Because the first module of ISS, Zarya, was an FGB module. And afterward, the Zvezda module attached to it, which was essentially Salyut 9. So the beginnings of ISS can trace all the way back to 1971 with the first Salyut space station module, and its ill-fated crew. Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev, their memory living on in the aft-most module of the International Space Station.
Bazı sorularım olacak: 450 tonluk bir aleti dünyada denemeden üstelik her ülke kendince yaparak, insanların yaşayacağı en riskli ortamı kalite kontrol veya test yapılmadan, ki bunun dünya tarihinde bir örneği yok, milyarlarca dolarlık bu alet 28 bin km hızla hareket ederken mi monte ettiler? Bu hızla iş yapan bir robot mu var? Nerede? O hızla giden bir aracın dışında Uzay yürüyüşü yapmak mümkün mü? Dünyada gönderilmeden önce ISS parçaların fotoğraflarını aradım bulamadım. Neden acaba? ISS 20 senedir uzay çöplerine maruz kalmadan 28 bin hızla nasıl dönmeye devam ediyor? Uzaydan dünyayı izleyen arkadaşlar 28 bin km hızla giden bir araçtan dışarıyı nasıl tertemiz görebiliyor? 24 saat canlı yayın yapan ISS nin etrafında ne veya uzağında ne yıldız ne de diğer uyduları göremiyoruz. Neden acaba? Bir de bu ISS dünyayı gösteriyor ama hiç ayı göstermiyor neden acaba?
You have outdone yourself again Jared. I watched this with my 7 year old son before he went off to school. He loves anything space. We both enjoyed and learned from this. Keep up the great work
It’s free because it’s propaganda brainwashing bullshit. 100% CGI, with no footage whatsoever of construction. Apollo 11 was a hoax too. Space is fake. Wake up.
I'd love to know what powered it. Just a big battery bank? I wonder how much capacity is left after 20+ years of service (power cycles damage batteries over time, like your old smartphone) and if it can be replaced and serviced.
The ISS primarily uses rechargeable nickel-hydrogen batteries for storing electrical power generated by its solar panels. These batteries are chosen for their reliability, durability, and ability to withstand the harsh conditions of space. Additionally, some newer lithium-ion batteries have been installed on the ISS to upgrade its power systems. I believe they also have chemical emergency use batteries they can activate if they need to. @@thevictoryoverhimself7298
Great video and it brings back a lot of memories. I supported 16 of these assembly missions including 6 from NASA JSC Mission Control Center, right up to 2007. An interesting component of berthing and assembly you didn't get into in the video is how you align the modules and why it took so long to bring them together. It wasn't like dock an aircraft to a gate with ground crew guiding alignment with light batons saying to move left or right. There were several methods used including centerline berthing cameras and alignment targets. The system I was supporting was the Space Vision System that used all of those black and white targets all over the modules. SVS used the Space Shuttle cameras in the payload bay to track the targets on both the incoming module and the module on the ISS it is attaching to, and calculated the relative position and orientation (x, y, z, yaw, pitch, roll) 30 times per second. It had to berth slowly because these modules are massive so their inertia was both hard to get moving and hard to stop, and could do a lot of damage if anything collided. Alignment was monitored closely the whole way in. Also, the ISS and shuttle were orbiting the Earth this whole time, so sometimes would traverse from night to day and vice-versa. That could put shadows on targets and make it hard to track all of them at the same time due to dynamic lighting. Pre-flight I had to analyze which targets were important and which could be lost and still perform the operation within spec, and keep an eye on this during berthing operations. The last one in 2007 I supported remotely from my home in Ottawa at 2 AM in my underwear, using telemetry over the internet to my laptop, a cellphone to our MCC team, and NASA TV video streamed over a modded Xbox. When I went back to bed, my girlfriend (now wife of 15 years) asked if I couldn't sleep and I told her that, no, I had gotten up to assemble the international space station. Fun times. :)
I would watch a whole hour or two of the entire ISS build. This is important work from a historical perspective, and for younger generations to understand that things take a long time to build. Fabulous work Jared!
This was an awesome video! I’m on the dive team that trained the astronauts at the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory to build the station in orbit during Shuttle. Now we are only training for ISS maintenance, crew rescue, and soon-to-be lunar missions! Love the channel and keep up the great work!
These may be odd questions but here goes: Do you work at the Sonny Carter Training Facility? If so, do you work on the dive team with a man named Dennis?
You have outdone yourself again Jared. I watched this with my 7 year old son before he went off to school. He loves anything space. We both enjoyed and learned from this. Keep up the great work
How incredibly interesting. I was fascinated, every step of the way. I agree with the commenter that said they would watch individual shuttle missions-from liftoff (inside and outside views) until landing. I learned so much here-thank you.
@@JaredOwen All who works in NASA, also knows, EARTH IS A CLOSED SYSTEM, NOBODY CANNOT LEAVE EARTH, THERE IS NOWHERE TO GO. They all know it, yet willingly deceive. + they are in the masonry club - that says it all. NASA deals with CGI and Hollywood basements, making “SPACE”, to deceive mankind.
The work you put into these projects is astounding! Your knowledge and talent is crucial for educational purposes! Not to mention your talents in the editing and production side of things, THANK YOU
FUN FACT: There is gravity on the ISS. It's true that gravity is weaker because it's farther from the centre of the Earth, but not by much. Earth's gravity is still 90% as effective as it is on the surface. The reason why astronauts float is because they're in free fall. It's a common misconception that the difficult part about space travel is getting into space. But that's actually the easy part. You then need to obtain enough speed to enter orbit, which may require as much as seven times the amount of energy you needed for launch, otherwise you'd fall straight back down. The station is orbiting at a speed of approximately 17,500 miles per hour, which allows it to keep falling towards the surface but moving sideways fast enough that it never actually reaches the ground.
Hi jarred!! My son absolutely loves your videos, he is 4yrs old and learns so much from them! My son blows my mind at the things he knows from your videos! He is autistic and your videos make him so happy. He asked me to comment on your videos to tell you that he loves your content and "he hopes you're very happy with your family" -his words. His name is jasper, and he is 100% your biggest fan.
What's important is that most of the major sections of the Russian segment are their own spaceships, they have their own propulsion and attitude control engines so they can maintain their own orbit after launch and even dock with themselves. US-made segments however are not, they are basically giant tin can cabins with science capacity as their primary design objective so they need to be carried to the station by the shuttle and placed onto the station using robot arms.
Well USSR's Buran didn't really become operational so they didn't have a " ferry" to carry their modules to outer space so they have to have their own propulsion.
The Russian side has the propulsion. The US side has all the life support. The point is, it can't be separated. This was done on purpose to keep international cooperation. Which is clearly evident since the Russian Ukraine war.
@@carcinogen60yearsago Russian segments do have their own power and life support as their counterparts on Mir worked well enough. They are probably not designed to handle too much load, not used or even broke down since US segments did most of these jobs for years.
It would be nice to mention all the other rockets used except the space shuttle. Most russian modules were launched on a Proton-K and newer ones on a Proton-M while some smaller modules used Soyuz vehicles and newer american small modules where launched on Falcon 9 vehicles. I know it would be a lot more work to animate all of them but they deserved to be atleast refered. Great animation by the way.
He mentioned the space shuttle cause it was the missions with the most important parts for the ISS. I mean he mentioned by name the russian modules the rockets were not the important part but the modules and work being done.
@@StrahdVonZarovich802 I agree with you I just believe that it is an interesting stat and it would be nice to be included in a video that is presenting many other facts also
Thank you, brother, for setting the Arabic language. We are very obsessed with space science, and finally I can listen instead of suffering from a problem in understanding🙂❤
You do way more to inform the public than NASA does. I'm 59 and a huge space geek. I consider myself very well informed but I have to tell you, I learn an awful lot from you. Please keep it up!
I did 3D animations, mostly mechanical stuff like this, back when Lightwave and the Video Toaster first came out. It is a LOT more work than folks think it is!!! Nicely done, and the explanations are top notch, too!
i saw the space shuttle that is inside the kennedy space center and i have to say i was mind blown by the MASSIVE amount of space and size the shuttle had, i never imagined it was so big
В детстве я посетил Буран ( один из его макетов для лётных испытаний) что стоит в Москве. Эти впечатления от масштаба космического корабля не сравнить ни с чем. Космическая станция это круто, а то что выводит эту станцию на орбиту, огромное мощное. Энергия-Буран имела огромный потенциал для человечества, печально что высокая стоимость похоронила проект.
@@greg7282 Что ты хочешь от автоматического перевода? Пока что ошибок не избежать, но это УЖЕ большой прогресс по сравнению с тем что было хотя бы 3-4 года назад.
I already knew how they built it but I decided to watch again just for fun and this video was really great! Great voice with a great voice over and great description and "chapters" of the events in the video and straight to the point with good and easy to understand explaining. The animations were really great too and a big part why the video is so good overall in my opinion. Great video! A part 2 would be really nice! :D
I know NASA has its own animation department, but I don't see how they could do any better than you Jared. I'm surprised they haven't contacted you so that they can incorporate your videos. Great work man.
25 years man, longer than any other space station in history. It’s thanks to durable materials (stainless steel, aluminium alloy, Kevlar and titanium). I even wrote an illustrated book about it.
As a Canadian I'm really proud of the pivotal role my country has played in space exploration. I'm not saying it couldn't be done without us, but I like that with such a small population we're still able to contribute in a meaningful way.
A love yer work, man! Your communication abilities are amazing The clarity is on par with David Attenborough. . You take complex constructions and manage to provide breakdowns without patronising the viewer. A talent that is rarely found on youtube. Love from a Scottish space nerd 🏴🤍💙🛰🌌🚀👨🚀
Who was the first to fly to the ISS? The Russian transport spacecraft Soyuz TM-31 launched to the ISS from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on October 31, 2000. It had a crew of three on board. The spacecraft commander was Yuri Gidzenko, the first flight engineer was Sergei Krikalev, and the second flight engineer's seat was taken by the American William Shepherd.
do they have actual video footage of them putting it together or did they forget to film one of the greatest achievements in human history? just asking
@@JasmineTeaEnjoyer This isn't all of them, but just to show you how absurdly easy it is to search for this...... All I did was search in the RUclips search bar, "ISS construction videos" and found this collection. It took 5 seconds. You people are patently lazy; it's embarrassing. ruclips.net/p/PLYu7z3I8tdEnjgkBIBgxaJfZl2LdQN-rP
It is sad, but I wouldn't call it an infathomable shame. Some of its modules are 30 years old and its age starts to show. I really hope that whatever will replace it will be a new symbol of global peaceful cooperation.
I was there in the ISS Mission Evaluation Room (MER) from the beginning (pre-FEL) until retirement at the end of 2010. We worked with the Flight Control Team to develop and implement procedures to address and repair ISS failures. Our motto: "Yep, we can fix that".
Saw this INCREDIBLE animation video after watching your "docuvid" on the USS Arizona!! You oughta be PAID (by NASA, DoD or SpaceX) for the time, effort and DETAIL you put into making these POWERFUL descriptions and re-enactments of the subject matter!! Thank you for breaking these histories down into COMPREHENSIVE, UNDERSTANDABLE depictions!!👍🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Jared, excellent, excellent, EXCELLENT VIDEO BRO! In plain and simple terms, your video is as comprehensive as modular as the assembly of the ISS. VERY well done!
I desperately want to see more videos on the mission that it took to build the ISS. My daughters love space and I am going to show this video to them immediately! Great work!
Scott Manley has a channel with a space theme. One section of his channel includes a series of about 25 videos about the construction of the ISS - essentially one video per mission.
This is fascinating. I didn't think that a video like this could hook me so hard, but your models, animations, knowledge, and narration are all impeccable. This was an incredibly thrilling watch! Thank you!
Какой же офигенный ролик, столько сил и времени было вложено в эту станцию, надеюсь следующие международные станции будут масштабнее и лучше 🙂 Amazing video, so much labor and time was invested in this station, i hope next isss will be more massive and advanced 🙂 See you space cowboy 💫
Your videos are fantastic. You do a great job of explaining all your content in simple and easily understandable terms. The animations are top notch. Thanks for all you do.
Wow a real adventure from the comfort of my couche! Takes for this great video! Truly amazing to see what is floating around above our heads and how they did it! I hope i'll find the rest of the building ISS videos! Thank you very much!!
It is amazing what the human race can accomplish when we are not killing one other in wars and other armed conflicts. Thank you for giving us this summation of what we have accomplished in space.
Thank you for watching my videos!
First maybe
33 seconds ago comment
10 second ago video?
We love your videos 😍
А вы сами смотрели своё видео?
Of course
Just to get it on the record: I don't mind how long it is, I'd definitely watch a video where you cover every single mission. They're just so good.
That would take a long time! But yeah, there's definitely some interesting missions I would like to animate
@@JaredOwen Oh definitely - I can only imagine just how much work goes into making one of your videos!
@@JaredOwen Perhaps unique missions like the Hubble? Or maybe even JWST.
@@JaredOwen Did you create all the 3D models yourself, or just animate them?
Yeah, i totally agree. Id watch every single one of them.
As a man who prides himself on knowing "a little bit about many things", I knew NOTHING about the ISS. I felt kinda embarrassed about that deficiency, which is why I am very, VERY grateful to you, Jared, for taking on this enormous task!! Outstanding presentation and easy-to-understand detail. So impressed, and so appreciated. My wife & I love ALL of your presentations!
thank you Marc! I appreciate the kind words
Your videos are brilliant. Teaches the workings of the world ❤❤
You should also learn about the Salyut space stations. Russia's single-module stations that would eventually become the core module of Mir, and then the Zvezda Command Module on the ISS. Also don't neglect US's Skylab as well. Its 50th Anniversary was just this year ^_^
I know there's been skylab, 1st ( I think?). I also remember mir being decommissioned & destroyed by burning up on reentry to earth's atmosphere.
@@Shady-Socks73 While Skylab was the first US space station, Russia beat us to it by a few years with Salyut 1. Unfortunately only one crew visited that station,... and even more unfortunately, all three died on re-entry when an oxygen seal ruptured and vented all their air into space.
While there was a Salyut 2 and 3, they are a separate lineage. Salyut 4 is technically the next in line after Salyut 1, and had two successful crews.
Salyut 6 is where things started getting interesting, as it was the first station to ever use two separate docking ports, and be able to actually be refueled in flight. It would have five extended duration visits (longer than two months) and a dozen shorter week-long visits. Salyut 7 was essentially a repeat of 6, but was in orbit while the first module of Mir was launched
Speaking of Mir, the reason its important to the story is because the core module of Mir was essentially Salyut 8, as it was of the same design. All of the additional modules were based on a cargo extension originally designed for Salyut 7, which they referred to as an FGB.
And why is the FGB important? Because the first module of ISS, Zarya, was an FGB module. And afterward, the Zvezda module attached to it, which was essentially Salyut 9.
So the beginnings of ISS can trace all the way back to 1971 with the first Salyut space station module, and its ill-fated crew. Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev, their memory living on in the aft-most module of the International Space Station.
これだけのCGvideoを作成するには気の遠くなるような作業の連続だと想像できます。こんな素晴らしい内容の映像を無料で観られることに感謝です。
Por qué se llama caminata espacial 🤔😂🤣😂
@@diegoalejandrolondonomonto316to “walk in space” drifting in orbit while tethered. Also you’re replying to a comment.
@@t3ssrhackd caminata sin caminar 🤣😂
Thank you for your kind words @micchyan1! Im really quite proud of my country and the ISS.
Bazı sorularım olacak: 450 tonluk bir aleti dünyada denemeden üstelik her ülke kendince yaparak, insanların yaşayacağı en riskli ortamı kalite kontrol veya test yapılmadan, ki bunun dünya tarihinde bir örneği yok, milyarlarca dolarlık bu alet 28 bin km hızla hareket ederken mi monte ettiler? Bu hızla iş yapan bir robot mu var? Nerede? O hızla giden bir aracın dışında Uzay yürüyüşü yapmak mümkün mü? Dünyada gönderilmeden önce ISS parçaların fotoğraflarını aradım bulamadım. Neden acaba? ISS 20 senedir uzay çöplerine maruz kalmadan 28 bin hızla nasıl dönmeye devam ediyor? Uzaydan dünyayı izleyen arkadaşlar 28 bin km hızla giden bir araçtan dışarıyı nasıl tertemiz görebiliyor? 24 saat canlı yayın yapan ISS nin etrafında ne veya uzağında ne yıldız ne de diğer uyduları göremiyoruz. Neden acaba? Bir de bu ISS dünyayı gösteriyor ama hiç ayı göstermiyor neden acaba?
The Canadarm is just amazing, a masterpiece of engineering and robotics. Great work Jared, I would love to see more of these videos!
The Canadarms alone (both Shuttle and ISS version) would be a good subject for a video. Structure, actuator and joint designs, end effectors...
I love these animation videos! The amount of effort put in these videos is just outstanding!
It's a lot of effort - but it's worth it!
Animation is all it will ever be!!
@@JaredOwenwhere is the REAL FOOTAGE of this thing?
@@garnet4846 Go outside of your cave little troll boy, and you will see it.
masonic fakery and lies
You have outdone yourself again Jared.
I watched this with my 7 year old son before he went off to school. He loves anything space. We both enjoyed and learned from this.
Keep up the great work
Thank you Conrad! I'm glad you guys enjoyed the video
@@JaredOwenI engoyed it too!
You can put this in the same category as santa.
@@garnet4846 your life must be miserable kiddo.
boy u got all the sheeple beliving the lies @@JaredOwen
この動画が無料なのが信じられない。こういう知識を日本語で得るのはいつも難しい。だからこうして最大限分かりやすい動画を日本語で出してくれることに感謝しかない。本当にありがとう。
It’s free because it’s propaganda brainwashing bullshit. 100% CGI, with no footage whatsoever of construction. Apollo 11 was a hoax too. Space is fake. Wake up.
@@tiffturtle8559 Russian bot
¡Gracias!
WOW I can't believe I missed this! Truly thank you and I'm so sorry for getting back to you so late!
@@JaredOwen 1 dollar AHHAHAHAHHA
@@GIBRIDQ 😭lol
The design feature of having identical connectors at both ends of the Canadarm 2 allowing it to almost walk around the station is so cool.
Yeah, didn't know it operated like this. So cool.
I'd love to know what powered it. Just a big battery bank? I wonder how much capacity is left after 20+ years of service (power cycles damage batteries over time, like your old smartphone) and if it can be replaced and serviced.
@@thevictoryoverhimself7298 well since its always attached to the station, they just dump power into it through the ports
Its powered by CGI software, as long the computer is on you can watch it ..@@thevictoryoverhimself7298
The ISS primarily uses rechargeable nickel-hydrogen batteries for storing electrical power generated by its solar panels. These batteries are chosen for their reliability, durability, and ability to withstand the harsh conditions of space. Additionally, some newer lithium-ion batteries have been installed on the ISS to upgrade its power systems. I believe they also have chemical emergency use batteries they can activate if they need to.
@@thevictoryoverhimself7298
As an ISS flight controller I just wanted to say this video is fantastic and more accurate than I expected. Keep it up!
Really?
@@s0me0ne123 of course not lol
@@tyleradams9358 lol
I googled him he's no bsing
This is so fascinating and fun to watch
Thank you! I appreciate knowing it looks aesthetically pleasing!
Great video and it brings back a lot of memories. I supported 16 of these assembly missions including 6 from NASA JSC Mission Control Center, right up to 2007.
An interesting component of berthing and assembly you didn't get into in the video is how you align the modules and why it took so long to bring them together. It wasn't like dock an aircraft to a gate with ground crew guiding alignment with light batons saying to move left or right.
There were several methods used including centerline berthing cameras and alignment targets. The system I was supporting was the Space Vision System that used all of those black and white targets all over the modules.
SVS used the Space Shuttle cameras in the payload bay to track the targets on both the incoming module and the module on the ISS it is attaching to, and calculated the relative position and orientation (x, y, z, yaw, pitch, roll) 30 times per second. It had to berth slowly because these modules are massive so their inertia was both hard to get moving and hard to stop, and could do a lot of damage if anything collided. Alignment was monitored closely the whole way in.
Also, the ISS and shuttle were orbiting the Earth this whole time, so sometimes would traverse from night to day and vice-versa. That could put shadows on targets and make it hard to track all of them at the same time due to dynamic lighting. Pre-flight I had to analyze which targets were important and which could be lost and still perform the operation within spec, and keep an eye on this during berthing operations.
The last one in 2007 I supported remotely from my home in Ottawa at 2 AM in my underwear, using telemetry over the internet to my laptop, a cellphone to our MCC team, and NASA TV video streamed over a modded Xbox. When I went back to bed, my girlfriend (now wife of 15 years) asked if I couldn't sleep and I told her that, no, I had gotten up to assemble the international space station. Fun times. :)
That’s fascinating - thanks for taking the time to relate that - modded Xbox for iss construction ftw
.. reading citation from Julie Vern science-fiction book 17.500 per hour in ISS around the world..
wtf using an xbox lol? that's sum badass stuff lol
Nice
Супер, спасибо что собрал МКС и ничего не поломал там посреди ночи)
I would watch a whole hour or two of the entire ISS build. This is important work from a historical perspective, and for younger generations to understand that things take a long time to build. Fabulous work Jared!
So you love to watch CGI nonsense
@@David-cv1se so you love trying to get attention by spreading misinformation just because people make great things
This is so mindblowing. Even with this video I cant blieve this is humanly possible!
It is incredible! Thanks for watching!
you'd be right, it isn't possible 😂
You idiot 😂 @@micka205
This was an awesome video! I’m on the dive team that trained the astronauts at the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory to build the station in orbit during Shuttle. Now we are only training for ISS maintenance, crew rescue, and soon-to-be lunar missions! Love the channel and keep up the great work!
Lol. Astronots
These may be odd questions but here goes:
Do you work at the Sonny Carter Training Facility?
If so, do you work on the dive team with a man named Dennis?
Calling someone a liar in public with absolutely zero proof. Shows everything we need to know about you.@@garnet4846
Wow! Underrated contender for having one of the coolest jobs out there.
@@John.Flower.Productions Yes and yes!
You have outdone yourself again Jared.
I watched this with my 7 year old son before he went off to school. He loves anything space. We both enjoyed and learned from this.
Keep up the great work
The noble art of YT plagiarism.
portal 2 SPAAAAAAAAAAACE sfx (sound effect)
How incredibly interesting. I was fascinated, every step of the way. I agree with the commenter that said they would watch individual shuttle missions-from liftoff (inside and outside views) until landing. I learned so much here-thank you.
I wish we lived in a world where all teachers would have so much passion in teaching like Jared. Great work as always!!!
Thank you!
@@JaredOwen All who works in NASA, also knows, EARTH IS A CLOSED SYSTEM, NOBODY CANNOT LEAVE EARTH, THERE IS NOWHERE TO GO. They all know it, yet willingly deceive.
+ they are in the masonry club - that says it all.
NASA deals with CGI and Hollywood basements, making “SPACE”, to deceive mankind.
The work you put into these projects is astounding! Your knowledge and talent is crucial for educational purposes! Not to mention your talents in the editing and production side of things, THANK YOU
You're welcome! Thanks for the kind words
I don't mind watching a 48 hour rendition of this. Too good!
FUN FACT: There is gravity on the ISS. It's true that gravity is weaker because it's farther from the centre of the Earth, but not by much. Earth's gravity is still 90% as effective as it is on the surface.
The reason why astronauts float is because they're in free fall. It's a common misconception that the difficult part about space travel is getting into space. But that's actually the easy part. You then need to obtain enough speed to enter orbit, which may require as much as seven times the amount of energy you needed for launch, otherwise you'd fall straight back down. The station is orbiting at a speed of approximately 17,500 miles per hour, which allows it to keep falling towards the surface but moving sideways fast enough that it never actually reaches the ground.
Hi jarred!! My son absolutely loves your videos, he is 4yrs old and learns so much from them! My son blows my mind at the things he knows from your videos! He is autistic and your videos make him so happy.
He asked me to comment on your videos to tell you that he loves your content and "he hopes you're very happy with your family" -his words. His name is jasper, and he is 100% your biggest fan.
Che bel commento!! Un saluto con affetto a Jasper, e che continui a nutrire la sua curiosità e ad imparare sempre cose nuove!! Saluti!🙋🏻♂🙋🏻♂
Great video as always! I would love a video about how particle accelerators like CERN work
I like that idea!
all lies your channel should be taking down for pushing lies @@JaredOwen
What's important is that most of the major sections of the Russian segment are their own spaceships, they have their own propulsion and attitude control engines so they can maintain their own orbit after launch and even dock with themselves. US-made segments however are not, they are basically giant tin can cabins with science capacity as their primary design objective so they need to be carried to the station by the shuttle and placed onto the station using robot arms.
Of course, this is precisely the idea behind the Russian modules.
Well USSR's Buran didn't really become operational so they didn't have a " ferry" to carry their modules to outer space so they have to have their own propulsion.
The Russian side has the propulsion.
The US side has all the life support.
The point is, it can't be separated.
This was done on purpose to keep international cooperation.
Which is clearly evident since the Russian Ukraine war.
@@mangatom192It did become operational, but it never went into operation. Too expensive.
@@carcinogen60yearsago Russian segments do have their own power and life support as their counterparts on Mir worked well enough. They are probably not designed to handle too much load, not used or even broke down since US segments did most of these jobs for years.
За велику працю подяка, всім миру і добра
It would be nice to mention all the other rockets used except the space shuttle. Most russian modules were launched on a Proton-K and newer ones on a Proton-M while some smaller modules used Soyuz vehicles and newer american small modules where launched on Falcon 9 vehicles. I know it would be a lot more work to animate all of them but they deserved to be atleast refered. Great animation by the way.
I agree, ignoring Russian contribution diminishes the value of the video
He mentioned the space shuttle cause it was the missions with the most important parts for the ISS. I mean he mentioned by name the russian modules the rockets were not the important part but the modules and work being done.
@@dataman6744 only a tankie will think this way
@@StrahdVonZarovich802 I agree with you I just believe that it is an interesting stat and it would be nice to be included in a video that is presenting many other facts also
@@StrahdVonZarovich802 Apparently not
Absolutely fantastic! Both the ISS construction as well as your animation which is didactic and an optical enjoyment.
It's almost impossible to realize how much time you put in your videos. Again, an incredible job Jared!
Thank you Dough! This was a lot of work for sure
This was insanely entertaining. Thank you!
Thank you, brother, for setting the Arabic language. We are very obsessed with space science, and finally I can listen instead of suffering from a problem in understanding🙂❤
Your animations are simply AMAZING.
My 4 year old son watches many of your videos, and even uses some of your vocabulary when describing them to me.
Молодцы! Все прям сами сделали как всегда! Просто лучшие!
Бля, в самом начале сказано, что рассмотрит не весь процесс, а только его часть
You do way more to inform the public than NASA does. I'm 59 and a huge space geek. I consider myself very well informed but I have to tell you, I learn an awful lot from you. Please keep it up!
He does make great videos, but I don't think he's done more than NASA.
Thank you Tim! There's a lot of interesting stuff out there that the public doesn't know about - I love animating it
@@RobertCraft-re5sf Can we agree that his videos are more palatable than what NASA often offers us? That was really my comment.
Agreed. Thanks buddy.
Correct, he is part of the propaganda
shoutout to the cameraman for surviving the vacuum of space and the 250 degrees temperature
What degrees? Kelvin, Celsius, or Fahrenhight?
@@jhapethlloydciron3185 Celsius
This is a great video. I’m Canadian and was proud to see the great contribution we made to such an epochal project.
I did 3D animations, mostly mechanical stuff like this, back when Lightwave and the Video Toaster first came out. It is a LOT more work than folks think it is!!! Nicely done, and the explanations are top notch, too!
OMG! I think this might be the most interesting thing I've ever discovered on the internet!!! Thanks so much for creating this.
Another space animation! I couldn't wait! Thank you Jared!
you're welcome! Thanks for watching
i saw the space shuttle that is inside the kennedy space center and i have to say i was mind blown by the MASSIVE amount of space and size the shuttle had, i never imagined it was so big
В детстве я посетил Буран ( один из его макетов для лётных испытаний) что стоит в Москве. Эти впечатления от масштаба космического корабля не сравнить ни с чем.
Космическая станция это круто, а то что выводит эту станцию на орбиту, огромное мощное.
Энергия-Буран имела огромный потенциал для человечества, печально что высокая стоимость похоронила проект.
Fantastic video! Beautifully put together and excellent descriptions of the space shuttle missions and construction of the ISS!
0:47
Первая миссия была с модулем Заря. Именно этот модуль обеспечивал все системы жизнеобеспечения.
зАря прошу отметить )))
Модуль Заря является собственностью НАСА, поскольку строительство финансировано США, но относится к российскому сегменту МКС.
модуль «Наука» Первый российский модуль на МКС за 11 лет. После стыковки произошёл инцидент с незапланированным включением двигателей «Науки»
обеспечивал, обеспечивал да не обеспечитывал
@@greg7282 Что ты хочешь от автоматического перевода? Пока что ошибок не избежать, но это УЖЕ большой прогресс по сравнению с тем что было хотя бы 3-4 года назад.
I already knew how they built it but I decided to watch again just for fun and this video was really great! Great voice with a great voice over and great description and "chapters" of the events in the video and straight to the point with good and easy to understand explaining. The animations were really great too and a big part why the video is so good overall in my opinion. Great video! A part 2 would be really nice! :D
It is very fascinating to know how the ISS was constructed. The amount of effort you put into these animations is immense. Thanks Jared!!!
You're welcome! Thanks for watching
I know NASA has its own animation department, but I don't see how they could do any better than you Jared. I'm surprised they haven't contacted you so that they can incorporate your videos. Great work man.
Thank you for having subtitles!
Спасибо, прекрасная работа! Ждем продолжения.
25 years man, longer than any other space station in history. It’s thanks to durable materials (stainless steel, aluminium alloy, Kevlar and titanium). I even wrote an illustrated book about it.
Sounds like a neat book!
Durable materials? The thing is in space ffs
@@pyropulseIXXIwhere its exposed to much higher radiation, insanely high temperature differences, and cold welding.
@@Mole.mp4 And micrometeorites
What's the name of your book??
Sounds like something I'll definitely buy
Thank you so much for one more super educational and very well animated video Jared!
You're welcome! Thanks for watching
This is some high quality content!
As a Canadian I'm really proud of the pivotal role my country has played in space exploration. I'm not saying it couldn't be done without us, but I like that with such a small population we're still able to contribute in a meaningful way.
"without us"... Tell me, how did you specifically contribute to this?
Since you're so proud of something and all 🤔
@@nonono9194?
@@Platinum_XYZ ?
My tax dollars.@@nonono9194
You know Canada has a history before October 2015, right?@GWG-ib9cv
Your animations should take a lot of your time but it's worth it. They are really great at teaching what we don't learn at school 👍👍
I would absolutely love a full series of the ISS construction or at least another video covering other notable modules
I'll see what I can do!
@@JaredOwen yes ! we want more 😁
I’d like to see some shots of the earth that aren’t cgi
Turn the camera around, stop cutting the feed, we know what’s going on
"Grandpa, wake up, Jared just posted a new animation."
I've been waiting SO LONG for this animation and to see it being posted...AWH MAN!
😀
A love yer work, man!
Your communication abilities are amazing
The clarity is on par with David Attenborough.
.
You take complex constructions and manage to provide breakdowns without patronising the viewer. A talent that is rarely found on youtube.
Love from a Scottish space nerd
🏴🤍💙🛰🌌🚀👨🚀
Thank you! I like the comparison to David Attenborough😀
Who was the first to fly to the ISS?
The Russian transport spacecraft Soyuz TM-31 launched to the ISS from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on October 31, 2000. It had a crew of three on board. The spacecraft commander was Yuri Gidzenko, the first flight engineer was Sergei Krikalev, and the second flight engineer's seat was taken by the American William Shepherd.
It's amazing how detailed this is. Just WOW.
急に早口になったりゆっくりなったりするの面白すぎ
Loved the video, but you could show how did the Russian modules went to space.
I 100% WANT A VIDEO COVERING EVERY MISSION!!!!
I would love to see a complete series of this. A detailed breakdown of each mission as it's own video.
do they have actual video footage of them putting it together or did they forget to film one of the greatest achievements in human history? just asking
Most of the modules have footage of them docking to the rest of the station.
link? @@msidc1238
@@JasmineTeaEnjoyer This isn't all of them, but just to show you how absurdly easy it is to search for this...... All I did was search in the RUclips search bar, "ISS construction videos" and found this collection. It took 5 seconds. You people are patently lazy; it's embarrassing.
ruclips.net/p/PLYu7z3I8tdEnjgkBIBgxaJfZl2LdQN-rP
What a great video!
I also love the Canadarms.
Humans really did great things
All of this is inspired by demon spirits
@@Negus-n4b no, no it was not
@@cardboard9124 humans are their own biggest threat..If the inner is evolving slower than outer you are very much moving backwards
Great work Jared, so pleased you have made this! Keen to see more. pt
An infathomable shame that they're gonna destroy it in 5 years
It is sad, but I wouldn't call it an infathomable shame. Some of its modules are 30 years old and its age starts to show. I really hope that whatever will replace it will be a new symbol of global peaceful cooperation.
I was there in the ISS Mission Evaluation Room (MER) from the beginning (pre-FEL) until retirement at the end of 2010. We worked with the Flight Control Team to develop and implement procedures to address and repair ISS failures. Our motto: "Yep, we can fix that".
canadarm doing a canadarm2 unboxing 💀💀
Please make more videos with the space shuttle. Its so interesting to watch and always cathes my attention
We can get along in space but not on Earth.
Very underrated comment 👏
Because they are smart people
This is absolutely astonishing. Your videos are incredible!
Thank Jared for suchva precise and wonderful animation. It helps me a lot to atleast know what and how the ISS is. Great work.
this channel is so underrated. amazing animations and flawless explanation!
Incredible voice over method :D
Excellent video, very well made and very informative. Thank you Jared.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching!
Saw this INCREDIBLE animation video after watching your "docuvid" on the USS Arizona!! You oughta be PAID (by NASA, DoD or SpaceX) for the time, effort and DETAIL you put into making these POWERFUL descriptions and re-enactments of the subject matter!! Thank you for breaking these histories down into COMPREHENSIVE, UNDERSTANDABLE depictions!!👍🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Another great video Jared. Thanks for not wasting my time with cheesy intros or stories.
I am blown away! What an incredible video! Not just the really amazing animations but also the information about all that. Big respect!!!
Wow, thanks Chris!
Jared, excellent, excellent, EXCELLENT VIDEO BRO! In plain and simple terms, your video is as comprehensive as modular as the assembly of the ISS.
VERY well done!
I desperately want to see more videos on the mission that it took to build the ISS. My daughters love space and I am going to show this video to them immediately! Great work!
Scott Manley has a channel with a space theme. One section of his channel includes a series of about 25 videos about the construction of the ISS - essentially one video per mission.
This is fascinating. I didn't think that a video like this could hook me so hard, but your models, animations, knowledge, and narration are all impeccable. This was an incredibly thrilling watch! Thank you!
The most beautiful clips I have ever seen on RUclips, thank you
Wow, thank you!
Exzellente Arbeit. Wirklich bemerkenswert deine Videos - vielen Dank!
Danke schön! Ich schätze die netten Worte sehr.
Well done Jared, really enjoyed.
thank you!
First time watched how does ISS built ,it really satisfied my curosity and cleared my understanding, Great work ,keep.it up.Thank you !!
Какой же офигенный ролик, столько сил и времени было вложено в эту станцию, надеюсь следующие международные станции будут масштабнее и лучше 🙂
Amazing video, so much labor and time was invested in this station, i hope next isss will be more massive and advanced 🙂
See you space cowboy 💫
Very nice informative video! Well done.
I appreciate that! Thank you!
Ребята чтобы у вас не происходило в политике, я вас прошу не останавливайтесь в космосе. Это же действительно что-то грандиозное!
Your videos are fantastic. You do a great job of explaining all your content in simple and easily understandable terms. The animations are top notch. Thanks for all you do.
Incredible detailed descriptions and animations. Great work. Thank you!
Wow, this is alot. Big thumbs up to all the people who contributed to build this spacecraft. It's beautiful ❤
incredible dense but good explanation, and the animations are unbelievable. Loved the video
Wow a real adventure from the comfort of my couche! Takes for this great video! Truly amazing to see what is floating around above our heads and how they did it!
I hope i'll find the rest of the building ISS videos! Thank you very much!!
God, I'm just half way in and this looks incredibly amazing. The animations are top notch. Thanks man. Take my subscription.
Amazing Informative Animated Videos....Great tour of International Space Station
It is amazing what the human race can accomplish when we are not killing one other in wars and other armed conflicts. Thank you for giving us this summation of what we have accomplished in space.
Mega! 😍 Thank you very much!! 🙏
Brilliant Content. Loving it Jared, Keep them coming :) Love from Chennai, India
Thanks so much for watching, and for the love from India!
Amazing animation of this video 😊 Congrats
Thank you!