NASA and Northrop Grumman are set to launch a Cygnus cargo capsule chock-full of analysis and provides to the International Space Station (ISS) on Saturday, Feb. 20.
The flight will blast off from Pad 09A at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia throughout a deliberate five-minute window that opens at 12:36 p.m. EST (1736 GMT).
A two-stage Antares rocket, standing 139 toes (42.5 meters) tall, will haul the Cygnus spacecraft into orbit, kicking off a two-day voyage to the ISS. Once it arrives on the space station, Cygnus will berth to the orbital outpost with the assistance of the station’s robotic arm.
Related: See superb launch photographs of Antares and Cygnus NG-13!
Both the Cygnus spacecraft and the Antares rocket are constructed by Northrop Grumman, which is one in all two firms which might be presently delivering cargo to the ISS for NASA. (SpaceX is the opposite.) The duo rolled out to the launch pad on Feb. 17 forward of Saturday’s deliberate launch.
The mission, designated NG-15, is the 14th operational resupply launch for the space station by Northrop Grumman and its predecessors, Orbital Sciences and Orbital ATK, as a part of its industrial resupply providers contract with NASA.
Northrop Grumman is constant its custom of naming the Cygnus spacecraft after a person who made key contributions to human spaceflight. In this case, the silvery spacecraft is known as the S.S. Katherine Johnson, after the late mathematician whose calculations made it attainable for John Glen to orbit the Earth 59 years in the past.
Cargo ships carry important provides and meals for the astronauts on the space station, but in addition a great deal of analysis investigations. On this mission, Cygnus will ship roughly 8,200 lbs. (3,700 kilograms) of science experiments, provides and {hardware} for the space station’s Expedition 64 crew.
The spacecraft may also carry 30 cubesats as a part of a scholar outreach program for Virginia’s Commercial Space Flight Authority that it’s going to deploy shortly after launching.
Typically cargo vessels stay hooked up to the station for a month or two, permitting the crew to refill them both with cargo to return to Earth or, as for Cygnus, with trash to dissipate when the spacecraft re-enters the ambiance.
Tucked contained in the cargo car will likely be numerous analysis investigations, together with a research that can take a look at muscle power in worms, one that can take a look at printing protein-based synthetic retinas in space, one other that can take a look at a new space pc, and plenty of extra.
Japanese astronaut and Expedition 64 crewmember, Soichi Noguchi, will use the station’s robotic arm to grapple the Cygnus, with an help from NASA crewmate Mike Hopkins. Mission Control in Houston will then oversee the spacecraft’s set up on the station’s Unity module Earth-facing port.
Cygnus will stay hooked up to the station for roughly two months earlier than performing a harmful re-entry into the Earth’s ambiance.
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