One day after the arrival of a Russian cargo ship, a rocket from SpaceX Falcon 9 started an improved Norththrop Grumman Space Frachter on Sunday, whereby the undemanded spaceship was recorded in the early Wednesday to capture the international space station.
On board: Spare parts, research material and crew supplies needed more than 5 tons, including holiday comrades for the station crew.
“The (cygnus) is packed with consumables such as nitrogen, oxygen, food and toilet parts and has a large number of spare parts that are required for systems such as our urine processor,” said Dina Contella, deputy manager of the Space Station program in the Johnson Space Center.
“We kept these items because we were too short last year and we want to have a good reserve for the future.”
Among the more delicious articles that are delivered, “are what I call specialties,” said Contella. “The crew can eat them at any time during one of the upcoming holidays or at any time, but these are foods such as mussels, oysters, crabs, roasts and smoked salmon as well as delicacies such as sweets, cookies and ice cream.”
“We also have a high school break competition called … Shakshuka Scramble. It is based on a popular dish in North Africa and the Middle East made of eggs that are cooked in spicy sauce.”
At the Cape Canaveral Space Force station, the engines of the first stage of Falcon 9 at 6.11 p.m. Edt thundered to life and generated £ 1.7 million to push the rocket into the early evening sky in a north -eastern trajectory that corresponds to the orbit of the room station.
After she had left the thick, lower atmosphere, the first stage separated to the course and flew back to a spectacular landing at the Space Force Station to improve SpaceX 67. Florida touchdown and its 505th successful booster overall.
The second stage of the Falcon 9 put the cygnus into the planned preliminary orbit and released it to fly with its own 14 and a half minutes after the upswing. If everything goes well, the spaceship will catch up with the space station in the early Wednesday to catch the laboratory’s robot arm.
The concern will come four days after a Russian progress cargo ship, which was launched on Thursday from Kazakhstan and has been docked at the port of the laboratory and has brought fuel, a new Russian space suit and other supplies required to the outpost.
The start on Sunday was the third of at least four SpaceX flights bought by Northrop Grumman, while the company is developing its own new booster. And it was the first flight of a Cygnus XL, so called because the spaceship was extended so that it could carry more freight to the space station.
“We worked with Northrop Grumman in this update and we are pleased that Northrop is willing to achieve this incredibly advantageous increase in capacity,” said Contella. “It is about 1.6 meters longer and wears about 2,600 additional pounds more freight.”
The NASA pays for freight delivery flights with cygnus spaceship and SpaceX dragon. So far, SpaceX has successfully carried out 32 missions for Dragon supplement, while Northrop Grumman launched 21 successful flights. Both companies suffered a failure during the flight at the beginning of the commercial replenishment program.
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