Shutting down the International Space Station: NASA’s bold plans to land outpost in ocean

NASA is laying the groundwork for plans to safely deorbit and land the low-Earth orbit space station, the largest of its kind ever built

The International Space Station has been continuously occupied by spacefarers from countries around the world for the last two decades, but it’s time among the cosmos won’t last forever.

Even now, NASA is laying the groundwork for plans to safely deorbit and land the low-Earth orbit space station, the largest of its kind ever built.

Private companies have until Feb. 12 to submit design proposals for “a new or modified spacecraft using a large amount of propellant” that in the years ahead, will be tasked with docking with the space station and safely crashing it into an ocean.

See Also:

The enigma of disc-shaped objects in Summer’s Triumph Tapestry

NASA plans to award the contract in June for the vehicle, which will be deployed upon the space station’s impending retirement in 2030.

Continue here: USA Today