The Conversation has a story about five key findings from 15 years of the International Space Station:
1. The fragility of the human body — there is considerable loss of strength and bone mass without intervention. Mitigating this is key to making it possible to have manned trips to mars.
2. Interplanetary contamination — spores of Bacillus subtilis were exposed to space upon the ISS (but shielded from solar UV radiation). "The space vacuum and temperature extremes alone were not enough to kill them off."
3. Growing crystals for medicine — "Crystals in a microgravity environment may be grown to much larger sizes than on Earth, enabling easier analysis of their micro-structure. Protein crystals grown on the ISS are being used in the development of new drugs for diseases such as muscular dystrophy and cancer."
4. Cosmic rays and dark matter — early results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) support the theory that a halo of dark matter surrounds the Milky Way.
5. Efficient combustion — flames burn more efficiently in space with much less soot produced. Understanding this may lead to more efficient combustion in vehicles.
(Score: 1) by Some call me Tim on Friday January 01 2016, @06:33AM
Try to understand that they're dealing with an ever changing environment. That equipment might change every time a re-supply mission comes up. That means having cables available to connect various experiments to power and monitoring gear as well as control and telemetry. All of that stuff is standard knowledge on the ground and the experiments are built to connect to what is available. That looks pretty clean, everything is Ty-wrapped out of the way, extra cables are protected and stowed in the over-head. For as little space as they have, that's not bad at all.
Questioning science is how you do science!