My Address in Space
Posted on May 15, 2012 12:07:18 AM | Don Pettit | 26 Comments    |

Me in Node 2, Deck 5, ISS, LEO 51.603.If my family and friends were to write me a letter, what address would they use? When I type my name on one of my stories, what address should I give?

It occurred to me that Space Station is a place as deserving of an address as other frontier stations like McMurdo Base or the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Base in Antarctica. These places have formal addresses, complete with zip codes. Even Navy ships have addresses. With the future development of commercial spaceships, I could realistically contemplate someone sending me a letter. So what address would they use? Do they need a zip code? Do you affix an “airmail stamp” or do we create a new category of “rocket mail” stamps? If Space Station were to have an address, instead of writing letters to Santa Claus asking for stuff, kids could write letters to astronauts asking questions about science and engineering.

My sleep station, a coffin-sized box, is located in the fifth deck space of Node 2. From an Earth-based perspective, I pop out of my sleep station as if I were coming out of the floor. I am thus situated on the International Space Station (ISS) in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) with an orbital inclination of 51.6 degrees (the angle of our orbit plane to the equator) and an average altitude of 400 kilometers. It occurred to me that my address should be: Node 2, Deck 5, ISS, LEO 51.603. The first three digits of your space zip code would be your orbital inclination and the last two a designator for your particular space station, with ISS being the third in this location (after the Salyut series and Mir). This zip code nomenclature should suffice, at least until there are more than 99 different space stations in orbit.

Don's blog also appears at airspacemag.com.


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26 Comments so far ( Post your own )
26 On Jun 12, 2012 03:27:46 PM  wb5rmg  added a comment on your blog post. 

Greetings Don...

Thank you so much for sharing your space experiences with us.
I enjoy your observations, photography, and perspectives
(especially as "Squash In Space" ...)
Recognizing the need you have for communication,
I appreciate the notion of words on paper, post-codes and stamps,
but that cost is unmanageable. Email and blog surely helps.

The ham radio contacts with school kids is a great reward,
both for them and for the crew. You'all are the modern explorers.
Even casual un-scheduled conversations with us terrestrial hams
gives us 'older-kids' things to dream about, and gives you live
contact with humans other than MCC-FDs, PODs and PayComs . . .

Radio waves communicate at the speed of light,
and you don't have to wait around for the atoms.

Thanks & 73 Alan

P.S. The Skylab missions were at a 50 degree inclination.

25 On May 28, 2012 11:39:02 AM  LUNA  added a comment on your blog post. 

Your adress : "CHEZ DON PETTIT"

Everybody knows where you are!

24 On May 21, 2012 01:53:22 PM  mike j  added a comment on your blog post. 

i never could come up a with a valid answer

23 On May 29, 2012 03:28:17 AM  Barney McGroo  added a comment on your blog post. 

This all sounds perfectly feasible, although do we need to specify whether it's delivered via Kazakhstan or Cape Canaveral?

22 On May 17, 2012 10:41:38 AM  Philippe Valdois  added a comment on your blog post. 

This is an excellent idea.
Also, the "normalization" of life in space through the use of such things as a postal address can only but help prepare the public for the time when space travel will become common.
Children should learn and feel that space is only an extension of our planet and sky where we have our place as human beings, a place for work and cooperation, a place for discovery and a place for poetry and change.

21 On May 17, 2012 08:37:24 AM  David  added a comment on your blog post. 

1. I wonder what the stamp would cost? (Do consider that anything on the ISC is probably the most expensive thing there is, by weight.)

2. I wonder what ink color to use. Black, nah - too much of that out the window, same with blue and brown. White, nah - matches the wall paper. Green, Yah! - not enough green on the ISC. A nice forest-like but vibrant green. Write on a natural textured earth-tone paper.

See my post on this subject on the Fountain Pen Network:

www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/index.php?/topic/221576-snail-mail-to-the-international-space-station/

Regards, David in Jakarta

20 On May 17, 2012 01:58:43 PM  Dean Hey  added a comment on your blog post. 

Dear Don,

You will notice that my email address ends in rocketmail.com although I am quite earthbound. I see no reason you could not work something out with Yahoo mail as I did to obtain my email address. And as long as you have an internet connection in space you would have no problem. Something like DPetit@rocketmail.com could work. Is there any reason it needs to be as complex as you suggest?

Respectfully yours,

Dr. Dean Hey
NY

19 On May 17, 2012 07:56:11 PM  Gary Walters  added a comment on your blog post. 

Loved your comments about a space zipcode being needed. When I served in the Navy, my rack space where I slept on the top row of three bunks in a space below the regular deck on a Fast Frigate Knoz Class Ship, the USS Valdez. I worked in Operations in the Combat Information Center or CIC. Our FPO was New York, but we were home ported out of Charleston, S.C.

To make contact with you after your return from your increment onboard the ISS. Safe travels!

Gary Walters

18 On May 15, 2012 09:14:33 PM  David Cohen  added a comment on your blog post. 

So how much would that cost in postage? I assume it is international?

17 On May 15, 2012 01:01:37 PM  guest  added a comment on your blog post. 

i have no answer

16 On May 15, 2012 01:03:44 PM  mike j  added a comment on your blog post. 

i have no clue

15 On May 15, 2012 01:39:00 PM  Brent  added a comment on your blog post. 

Interesting thought. I'll mail you a letter right now... Hope it gets there before you leave or maybe it will be there waiting for you when you arrive on your next expedition! :O)

14 On May 15, 2012 01:41:57 PM  Andre Berends  added a comment on your blog post. 

Hi Don,

Great thinking about addresses in space, but I think you missed a space station: Skylab.
The correct address then would be "Node 2, Deck 5, ISS, LEO 51.604"

I enjoy reading blogs from LEO... Thanks!

13 On May 15, 2012 01:56:56 PM  Trent  added a comment on your blog post. 

Don,
I think you may need to modify your zip code. I think it may need to be 51.604

I did not see Skylab identified in your list of Space Stations.
If I am mistaken, please explain because I have always thought of Skylab as a Space Station.

PS - Keep up the great posts. They are very thought provoking and appreciated.
Thanks
Trent

12 On May 15, 2012 02:05:51 PM  Ken  added a comment on your blog post. 

Hmm, the Postal Service will have to update their motto:

"Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night nor solar wind stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds." :o)

11 On May 15, 2012 02:15:47 PM  Serkan ZERMAN  added a comment on your blog post. 

Hello,

In my opinion the Logical Way Of that Coding is very cleverly.

Best Regards,
Serkan ZERMAN

10 On May 15, 2012 02:35:20 PM  David Harrison  added a comment on your blog post. 

This is worth putting to the (appropriately named) Universal Postal Union. Following it through you'll be on a different mail route to the 'Heavenly Palace' (inclination 42 degrees?). We may not be able to send fan-mail any time soon though...taking a rough guess of $20,000/kg from Earth to LEO, a brief letter on airmail or old-school onionskin paper will still cost $400!

9 On May 15, 2012 03:34:43 PM  Victor Moraes  added a comment on your blog post. 

Mr. Petit's good to know at any time, if God and the possibilities of factual conditions permit, then I'll make you a visit for us to drink tea. I'll take a few biscuits.

8 On May 15, 2012 03:39:12 PM  Bruce Thompson  added a comment on your blog post. 

Excellent! Now we know your address and zip code, we'll be sure to write.
First, we need to find some super-lightweight paper - with the cost per kilogram to LEO, the postage could be ... considerable ...

7 On May 15, 2012 04:28:32 PM  Karen Lopez (@datachick)  added a comment on your blog post. 

Love you post about addresses. But I'd like to point out that ZIPCodes are a US concept only. In the rest of the world, we call them "Postal Codes".

And in most places, we use a mix of letters and numbers. So we have lots of opportunities to have fun with a postal code. For instance, Santa's postal code is H0H 0H0. Perfect.

Let's keep the International Space Station...international. Your task is to come up with a postal code scheme that is memorable. Maybe we should include mathematical (Greek) letters, just to make it more space-oriented? Perhaps an entire formula?

Ideas, anyone?

6 On May 15, 2012 05:42:13 PM  Victor Moraes  added a comment on your blog post. 

Petit, there will be another opportunity for us to take tea. Better we combine a cafe on Mars! How about? Is it possible for me and for you, if we work in a timely manner. Ask Charles Bolden because I do not talk nonsense. Trust. Your work is noble and inspiring many people, and certainly children will still with us to Mars, more experienced, more courageous, more desirous of a better world, not only in the physical or geographic, but making us better people. And you are a good example of someone who does something nice, really interesting and constructive. In English I think what is best says "cool". Accept the proposal and I promise to make you the best coffee typical here in southern Minas Gerais, in the colander. It will be cold, we need to drink some hot drinks. Maybe even a cognac, to strengthen the chest. And in a few weeks and will return, if you want. But to make coffee in a percolator is best for us to be established. 2030 is a prophecy rather than Nibiru. It's done more than hope, is done with work. My greetings, great astronaut!

5 On May 18, 2012 07:01:32 PM  Nassem  added a comment on your blog post. 

I recently got permission and sent a letter to JSC for delivery to ISS. I also remade your "Angry Birds Space" experiment and compared it to yours! You inspire this 12 year old kid very much Mr. Pettit!:)

4 On May 18, 2012 10:32:59 AM  guest  added a comment on your blog post. 

Great ideas. How would a student actually contact you if he wanted to? And/or would this be a feasible request?
ganostevenss@comcast.net

3 On May 18, 2012 03:41:32 AM  carkingdom  added a comment on your blog post. 

So, should we try sending you letters? Who is going to deliver them...i wonder.

2 On May 18, 2012 02:06:03 AM  guest  added a comment on your blog post. 

i want to be an astronomer. :)

1 On May 15, 2012 01:39:38 PM  banaszak  added a comment on your blog post. 

ich wünsche allen Astro- und Kosmonauten eine erfolgreiche Arbeit auf der ISS, zum Wohle der Menschheit.

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