TechLair

  • Home
  • contact
  • About
  • Privacy Policy

Fruits, candy, science experiments taken up to the ISS on SpaceX's 20th resupply mission

Monday, March 9, 2020 by Piyush Suthar | Comments

Home Tech Fruits, candy, science experiments taken up to the ISS on SpaceX's 20th resupply mission

 A SpaceX cargo ship arrived at the International Space Station on Monday, delivering the company’s 20th batch of gear and treats.

The Dragon capsule reached the orbiting lab after launching late Friday night. NASA astronauts Andrew Morgan and Jessica Meir used the station’s robot arm to capture the spacecraft.

The 1,950-kg shipment contains science experiments and equipment, as well as special goodies for the three-person crew aloft for months: grapefruit, tomatoes, Skittles, Reese’s Pieces, and Hot Tamales.

The @SpaceX #Dragon is powered up and open for business at the station as @AstroDrewMorgan and @Astro_Jessica begin unpacking and activating the new science. More pix... https://t.co/N3bP9qF37E pic.twitter.com/xOb6sEbXQq

— Intl. Space Station (@Space_Station) March 9, 2020

This is the last of SpaceX’s original-style Dragons. All future ones are designed to carry either cargo or crew and will dock automatically rather than require robot-arm assistance. SpaceX has been sending up station cargo since 2012 and plans to start launching NASA astronauts this spring.

The twentieth launch of the SpaceX crew dragon that went on a resupply mission to the ISS. Image credit: Twitter/SpaceX

From 418 kilometers up, Meir congratulated SpaceX on its many milestones, including the fact this is the third flight for this particular Dragon. Spacecraft and rocket recycling, she noted, is “the more sustainable approach that will be paramount to the future of spaceflight.”

Today we caught a 🐉 on @Space_Station, marking the last @SpaceX cargo vehicle captured with the #Canadarm2. From now on, @SpaceX will automatically dock to station. This #Dragon capsule has been on station 2 times prior - sustainability is paramount to future space exploration. pic.twitter.com/rJ0ZYKdmhd

— Jessica Meir (@Astro_Jessica) March 9, 2020

The Dragon will remain at the orbiting lab for a month before returning to Earth with science specimens.




Authored by Piyush Suthar
Pro Blogger


Follow me on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, YouTube.

Load comments
  • Newer Post
  • Home
  • Older Post
  • techlair
    Over 1,500+ Readers

    Get fresh content from TechLair

    brand222 facebook brand2 envelope-o

    BEST OF TechLair

    Learn to build working Android apps in 7 days — for just $12
    Airbnb lets customers cancel bookings for free amid coronavirus pandemic
    How I accidentally built a tech startup — without any technological knowledge
    7 best coronavirus dashboards to map the spread of COVID-19


    Copyright © 2019 TechLair. All rights reserved.
    Privacy Policy • DMCA • Contact