SpaceX’s Dragon Cargo Arrives Safely Aboard The ISS, New Crew Members To Follow


It’s a busy, busy time at the International Space Station (ISS). Expedition 53-54 crewmembers have just received their “Christmas goodies” launched on Friday (December 15) aboard SpaceX’s Dragon capsule. Meanwhile, the rest of Expedition 54 crew are on their way to the ISS and are expected to arrive there tomorrow.

The Dragon capsule just completed its second delivery to the ISS on Sunday (December 17). SpaceX’s recycled cargo spacecraft successfully docked with the space station’s Harmony module at 8:26 a.m. EST (1357 GMT), NASA announced.

The unmanned Dragon capsule was picked up two and a half hours earlier by NASA astronauts Joe Acaba and Mark Vande Hei, who used ISS’s robotic arm to capture the capsule at 5:57 a.m. EST (1057 GMT), Space.com reported. Dragon’s berthing to the space station can be watched in the video below, narrated by NASA spokesperson Daniel Huot.

“It’s a great day to see Dragon back on ISS again,” spacecraft communicator Leslie Ringo told the astronauts over the radio all the way from NASA’s Mission Control in Houston, Texas.

“It’s a beautiful spacecraft and we’re looking forward to digging into it and getting some science on board,” Acaba radioed back.

This latest resupply mission, dubbed CRS-13, is the first in which a recycled capsule is launched atop a reused Falcon 9 rocket, as part of SpaceX’s efforts to reduce launch costs. The Dragon capsule delivered almost 5,000 pounds of “goods” to the orbiting laboratory, including crew supplies, equipment and scientific hardware, such as the TSIS-1 sensor and optic fiber manufacturing gear.

Also on the payload were the Budweiser barley seeds that the beermaker sent to be studied in microgravity conditions as part of the “Bud on Mars” campaign, and which have now arrived aboard the ISS just in time for Christmas.

According to the Denver Post, among the “Christmas presents” shipped to the ISS via SpaceX’s Dragon capsule NASA supposedly also sent a copy of the newly released Star Wars: The Last Jedi movie, “as a special holiday treat for the astronauts.”

The Dragon spacecraft will spend the next month at the ISS, returning to Earth in mid-January with another precious cargo. Since Dragon is the only supply ship able to carry back experiments from the ISS, the spacecraft will be returning home with “more than 3,600 pounds of research, hardware and crew supplies,” NASA informs.

This successful second delivery to the orbiting laboratory will get the ball rolling for NASA’s Expedition 54, especially since its crew is about to be replenished.

Just a few hours before Acaba and Vande Hei intercepted the Dragon capsule on Sunday, three new crewmembers of Expedition 54 set out on their journey to the ISS aboard a Soyuz spacecraft.

NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei operated ISS’s robotic arm to capture SpaceX’s Dragon capsule while being assisted by crewmate Joe Acaba.

NASA’s Scott “Maker” Tingle, Roscosmos’ Anton Shkaplerov, and Norishige “Neemo” Kanai of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) are currently on their way to the space station, where they will be joining Acaba and Vande Hei, as well as Expedition 54 commander Alexander Misurkin of Roscosmos, as flight engineers.

The trio launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 2:21 a.m. EST (0721 GMT) and will spend about two days in Earth orbit before docking with the ISS’s Rassvet module on Tuesday (December 19).

The docking is scheduled to take place at 3:43 a.m. EST (0843 GMT) and will be streamed on NASA TV, the space agency disclosed in a news release. The coverage is set to begin as early as 3 a.m., the highlight being the 5 a.m. broadcast of the opening of hatches between the Soyuz spacecraft and the ISS.

The arrival of the three astronauts will bring up the number of the ISS crewmembers back to six, after Expedition 53 commander Randy Bresnik of NASA and flight engineers Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency and Sergey Ryazanskiy of Roscosmos returned to Earth on December 14. (Yes, these are the brave souls that earlier this month made pizza in space, on top of other impressive achievements, such as Bresnik’s three spacewalks and Nespoli’s footage of a “fireball” meteor in November.)

Tingle, Shkaplerov, and Kanai will be spending more than four months on the ISS until their homecoming in April, whereas Vande Hei, Acaba, and Misurkin will be staying aboard the space station until February 2018, NASA points out.

The new crewmembers of Expedition 54 — NASA’s Scott Tingle (top), JAXA’s Norishige Kanai (middle) and Roscosmos’ Anton Shkaplerov (bottom) — before boarding the Soyuz spacecraft that will take them to the ISS.

The United States is thereby extending once again the number of its astronauts aboard the space station, from three to four, after Russia’s decision to limit Roscosmos’ participation on the ISS. This long-term increase in NASA crew size, which started with the members of Expedition 53, will allow the space agency “to maximize time dedicated to research on the space station,” NASA specified in the news release.

Expedition 54 will be involved in about 250 scientific experiments, including the design and manufacture of optic fiber filaments (for which the research materials have just been delivered via SpaceX’s Dragon capsule), as well as the investigation of a new drug against muscular breakdown, International Business Times notes.

This potential new treatment would become useful not only on the ISS but also back home since it is intended to fight the muscular breakdown experienced both in space and during “extended bed rest on Earth,” shows NASA.

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