Skip to main content

Check out the space station’s ‘crossroads’ in this 360-degree video

International Space Station (ISS) astronaut Thomas Pesquet has been busy creating various videos introducing us to different parts of the orbiting laboratory.

Node 2 | Space Station 360 (in French with English subtitles available)

His latest effort is an immersive 360-degree video highlighting the Node 2 module, also known as Harmony.

Recommended Videos

The Frenchman describes Node 2 as a “crossroads” where you can sometimes see “astronauts flying in all directions.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Float one way and you’ll head into the U.S.-operated Destiny module. Go another way and you’ll find yourself in Europe’s Columbus module. Take another route and you’ll enter Japan’s Kibo module.

Pesquet highlights various features of Node 2, including its blue tables for carrying out work-related tasks using a wide range of tools that you can see attached to the wall with Velcro.

“It can sometimes look kind of messy,” Pesquet says of the tool kit. “But normally, we know exactly where things are.”

Node 2 is also large enough to house four sleeping stations. Pesquet slides into one during the video, explaining that you can also use the room as a private space for reading or tapping out emails to family and friends back on Earth.

The astronaut explains that just before and after sleeping, you lose the sense of weightlessness somewhat because of the way you’re fastened to the wall (so you don’t float around in the night). But he adds that it’s always a great feeling the next morning when you leave the sleeping station and feel yourself floating again.

The importance of Node 2 is highlighted by the fact that the module also acts as a work platform for the station’s Canadarm2 robotic arm and includes docking ports for visiting spacecraft.

Being a 360-degree video, the viewer can move around the entire scene to explore the module. Pesquet delivers the tour in his native tongue, so if you’d prefer English, simply hit the “CC” button on the YouTube video player to launch subtitles.

Pesquet’s other 360-video shows us around the Columbus module. Another video features the astronaut talking us through the gear used for spacewalks.

NASA describes the space station as around the size of a six-bedroom house. The habitable satellite features sleeping quarters, three bathrooms, a gym, and a 360-degree bay window through which visiting astronauts are able to snap gorgeous Earth images.

To find out more about how crew members work, rest, and play aboard the ISS, check out these insightful videos created by the astronauts themselves.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch a space station astronaut enjoy a rare treat in style
A Russian Progress spacecraft approaches the space station.

A Russian cargo spacecraft arrived at the International Space Station (ISS) on Saturday, bringing with it nearly three tons of food, fuel, and other supplies for the current crew.

While much of the food will be processed and packaged, the spaceships that bring supplies to the orbital outpost often include a small amount of fresh fruit for astronauts to enjoy in the days following their arrival.

Read more
SpaceX will help to crash the International Space Station
The International Space Station.

The International Space Station orbiting about 250 miles above Earth. NASA

The International Space Station (ISS) is nearing the end of its life after more than two decades in low-Earth orbit.

Read more
New Nikon camera gear for space station marks end of an era
A Nikon camera aboard the space station.

A spacewalk-ready Nikon camera aboard the International Space Station. NASA

While astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) spend most of their time conducting science experiments in microgravity conditions, some of their work also includes capturing images of Earth for research and monitoring — and also so we folks back on terra firma can appreciate just what a beautiful place it is.

Read more