![]() Their lives depend on it.Īccording to NASA, the ISS orbits the Earth about every 90 minutes, 16 times a day, at an altitude of some 240 miles above the planet, a height known as low-earth orbit. They have no choice: Even as they can almost certainly see evidence of the war with their own eyes, they must live and work together. ![]() Inside the ISS, the seven crew members of what is denoted as Expedition 66-four Americans, two Russians, and a German-must ignore the violence and political rupture going on below them and continue to cooperate. That partnership is facing its most dire test right now. ![]() But people in Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Mariupol-and in Moscow, Washington, D.C., and virtually any other city on Earth for that matter-are catching sight of the International Space Station (ISS), the third brightest object in the sky, not to mention one of the most expensive, technical, and politically complex multinational partnerships ever undertaken. If unaware of the light’s source, Ukrainians may fear it is yet another lethal Russian weapon seeking to rain its wrath down on them. But in the darkness, an easily visible, unwavering point of white light will sweep over the heads of Ukrainians and Russians alike for a few minutes most nights, like a cue ball shot across the heavens. The lights have gone out in many parts of Ukraine as Russia’s war ravages the land and its people.
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