SpaceX Dragon Heads to Space
The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, carrying the Dragon spacecraft loaded with nearly
2.5 tons of supplies and experiment hardware for the International Space
Station’s Expedition 39 crew, lifted off at 3:25 p.m. EDT Friday from Launch
Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Friday’s launch of the third SpaceX commercial resupply services mission sent
the Dragon space freighter on a course to rendezvous with the station Sunday
morning. Commander Koichi Wakata and Flight Engineer Rick Mastracchio will
capture Dragon using the Canadarm2 robotic arm at 7:14 a.m. to set it up for its
berthing to the Earth-facing port of the Harmony module. Live NASA Television
coverage of Sunday’s Dragon activities begins at 5:45 a.m. and returns at 9:30
a.m. for coverage of the berthing of Dragon to the Earth-facing port of the
Harmony node.
The scientific payloads on Dragon include investigations that focus on
efficient ways to grow plants in space, demonstrating laser optics to
communicate with Earth, human immune system function in microgravity and Earth
observation. Also being delivered is a set of high-tech legs for Robonaut 2,
which can provide the humanoid robot torso already aboard the orbiting
laboratory with the mobility it needs to help with regular and repetitive tasks
inside the space station.
Dragon also will deliver the second set of investigations sponsored by the
Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS), which manages the
portion of the space station designated a U.S. National Laboratory. CASIS
investigations on Dragon are part of the organization's initial suite of
supported payloads linked to Advancing Research Knowledge 1, or ARK 1. The
investigations include research on protein crystal growth, which may lead to
drug development through protein mapping, and plant biology.
Meanwhile aboard the International Space Station, the Expedition 39 crew is
in the homestretch of preparations for a spacewalk to replace a failed backup
computer relay box in the S0 truss. That 2 ½-hour spacewalk by Mastracchio and
Flight Engineer Steve Swanson is slated to begin at 9:20 a.m. Wednesday.
The spacewalk will be the 179th in support of space station assembly and
maintenance, the ninth in Mastracchio’s career and the fifth for Swanson.
Mastracchio will carry the designation of EV 1, wearing the spacesuit bearing
red stripes. Swanson will be EV 2, wearing the spacesuit without stripes.
Mastracchio and Flight Engineer Steve Swanson installed a new circuit board
inside a spare multiplexer-demultiplexer (MDM) that they will carry with them
outside the station to replace the backup MDM that failed during routine testing
April 11. The failed unit is one of the station's two external MDMs that provide
commands to some of the space station's systems, including the external cooling
system, solar alpha rotary joints and mobile transporter rail car.
After the two NASA astronauts installed the new card in the spare MDM, Wakata
worked with the ground team at Mission Control in Houston to perform a
functional checkout of the spare.
Afterward, Mastracchio trimmed a spare thermal insulator sheet to properly
fit the MDM.
Wakata also found time for station science with another session of the Hybrid
Training experiment. This Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency study takes a look
the health benefits of applying electric stimulation to a muscle opposing the
voluntary contraction of an active muscle. In addition to providing a backup to
the traditional exercise devices aboard the station, Hybrid Training may be
useful in keeping astronauts fit as they travel beyond low Earth orbit aboard
smaller spacecraft.
Mastracchio took a brief break from his work to talk with students at his
three alma maters -- the University of Connecticut, the Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in Troy, New York, and the University of Houston-Clear Lake near the
Johnson Space Center.
Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin spent much of his day working in the Zvezda
service module as he cleaned ventilation screens and performed routine
maintenance on the Russian life-support system.
Flight Engineer Alexander Skvortsov performed another session of the
Kulonovskiy Kristall experiment, gathering information about charged particles
in a weightless environment.
Skvortsov also teamed up with Flight Engineer Oleg Artemyev to unload items
from the ISS Progress 53 cargo craft docked at the aft port of Zvezda. Progress
53 is set to undock from the station on Wednesday, April 23, at 4:54 a.m. to
test its Kurs automated rendezvous equipment. The vehicle will redock with
Zvezda on April 25 at 8:16 a.m. Progress 53 delivered 2.9 tons of food, fuel and
supplies to the station on Nov. 29 following a four-day journey that included a
“flyby” of the station to test a new lighter, revamped Kurs system .
And after 11 days of free flight for engineering tests, the Russian ISS
Progress 54 cargo ship, now loaded with trash from the station, was commanded to
deorbit for its fiery entry into the Earth’s atmosphere for disposal. The
deorbit burn at 10:52 a.m. sent the cargo craft on a course for atmospheric
entry over the Pacific Ocean at 11:32 a.m.
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