Figures & data
Figure 1 Internal complexity of the ISS.
Notes: (A) NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, Expedition 30 commander, conducts a session with the Preliminary Advanced Colloids Experiment at the Light Microscopy Module. (B) Expedition 22 flight engineer Tim Creamer works with flex hoses in the ISS’s US Destiny laboratory. (C) Using a vacuum cleaner. Courtesy of NASA.
Abbreviation: ISS, International Space Station.
![Figure 1 Internal complexity of the ISS.Notes: (A) NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, Expedition 30 commander, conducts a session with the Preliminary Advanced Colloids Experiment at the Light Microscopy Module. (B) Expedition 22 flight engineer Tim Creamer works with flex hoses in the ISS’s US Destiny laboratory. (C) Using a vacuum cleaner. Courtesy of NASA.Abbreviation: ISS, International Space Station.](/cms/asset/cd61e970-777c-4f96-b0d4-59fef0e2ec40/didr_a_67275_f0001_c.jpg)
Figure 2 Ultrathin sections of Staphylococcus aureus grown as (A) terrestrial control and (B) in-flight aboard Salyut 7 by Chrétien in 1982 for the Cytos 2 program.
Note: Images from Tixador et alCitation77 with permission from Elsevier.
![Figure 2 Ultrathin sections of Staphylococcus aureus grown as (A) terrestrial control and (B) in-flight aboard Salyut 7 by Chrétien in 1982 for the Cytos 2 program.Note: Images from Tixador et alCitation77 with permission from Elsevier.](/cms/asset/68861e73-67ca-4695-a6bd-46d568a42944/didr_a_67275_f0002_b.jpg)