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For over three decades, the International Space Station has been humanity’s home in orbit — a floating laboratory traveling at 17,500 miles per hour, circling Earth every 90 minutes. It has witnessed sunrise 16 times a day. Hosted astronauts from around the world. Advanced medicine, climate science, and deep-space exploration. And now… NASA plans to end it. In the coming years, the ISS will not explode. It will not drift away. It will be deliberately guided into Earth’s atmosphere — and brought down in a controlled descent over the most remote part of the Pacific Ocean. Why destroy the largest structure ever built in space? In this cinematic AeroGalaxy documentary, we explore: • The real reason the ISS cannot remain in orbit forever • The science behind orbital decay • NASA’s detailed deorbit strategy and Point Nemo landing zone • The emotional weight of losing humanity’s orbital outpost • And what comes next — from commercial space stations to lunar bases under the Artemis program This is more than the fall of a space station. It’s the end of an era of cooperation that began after the Cold War — and the start of a new chapter in human exploration. As the ISS makes its final orbit, one question remains: Are we witnessing the end… or preparing for something greater? If you enjoy intelligent, cinematic space and aviation documentaries, consider subscribing to AeroGalaxy and join the conversation below. #InternationalSpaceStation #ISS #NASA #SpaceDocumentary #ISSDeorbit #SpaceStationReentry #OrbitalDecay #PointNemo #ArtemisProgram #LunarGateway #FutureOfSpace #SpaceExploration #AeroGalaxy #NASAArtemis #CommercialSpace