ROCKET SCIENCE
Dragon Now Installed To Station For Month-Long Stay
by Mark Garcia for ISS News
Houston TX (SPX) Jul 03, 2018

July 2, 2018: International Space Station Configuration. Five spaceships are attached to the space station including the SpaceX Dragon and Cygnus resupply ships from the United States; and from Roscosmos, the Progress 69 resupply ship and the Soyuz MS-08 and MS-09 crew ships.

Three days after its launch from Florida, the SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft was installed on the Earth-facing side of the International Space Station's Harmony module at 9:52 a.m. EDT.

The 15th contracted commercial resupply mission from SpaceX (CRS-15) delivers more than 5,900 pounds of research, crew supplies and hardware to the orbiting laboratory.

Among the research arriving to the U.S. National Laboratory is the Space Algae investigation, will discuss research to select algae strains adapted to space and sequence their genomes to identify growth-related genes.

Algae consume waste carbon dioxide, can provide basic nutrition and may perceive microgravity as a trigger to produce algae oils rich in antioxidants that may help mitigate the harmful effects of microgravity and cosmic radiation during spaceflight. The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS), which manages the U.S. National Laboratory, is sponsoring the investigation.

A technology demonstration arriving is an observational pilot study with the Crew Interactive MObile companioN (CIMON) that aims to provide first insights into the effects of crew support from an artificial intelligence (AI) in terms of efficiency and acceptance during long-term missions in space.

After Dragon spends approximately one month attached to the space station, the spacecraft will return to Earth with about 3,800 pounds of cargo and research, including an investigation to advance DNA sequencing in space and the Angiex cancer therapy investigation to improve understanding of endothelial cells that line the walls of blood vessels.


Related Links
NASA's Space Station Blog
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com

ROCKET SCIENCE
'Flying brain' blasts off on cargo ship toward space station
Tampa (AFP) June 29, 2018
A ball-shaped artificial intelligence robot nicknamed the "flying brain" because it is trained to follow and interact with a German astronaut blasted off Friday toward the International Space Station aboard SpaceX's Dragon cargo ship. A spare hand for the station's robotic arm, an experiment to measure plant stress and a study of a new cancer treatment were also on board as the Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 5:42 am (0942 GMT). "We have ignition and liftoff! The Falco ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

ROCKET SCIENCE
AEGIS Weapons System sale to Spain approved by State Department

Pentagon awards Lockheed $78M for AEGIS development

Saudi says two Yemen rebel missiles intercepted over Riyadh

Japan says halting missile drills after Trump-Kim summit

ROCKET SCIENCE
BAE contracted for laser-guided APKWS rocket systems

Joint Air-to-Ground Missile ready for low-rate initial production

Lockheed tapped for guided missile support

Pentagon contracts for guided-missile launchers, components

ROCKET SCIENCE
Australia buys high-tech drones to monitor South China Sea, Pacific

Navy contracts Raytheon for LOCUST prototype

Facebook halts production of drones for internet delivery

Israel fires at drone from Syria, forces retreat

ROCKET SCIENCE
New Land Mobile Technology Driving The Need For Modern Satcom Capabilities

On-the-move communications system set to field this fall

Lockheed Martin's 5th AEHF comsat completes launch environment test

IAP Worldwide Services tapped for satellite systems

ROCKET SCIENCE
Air Force awards nearly $900 million for new bunker buster bombs

Israel graduates first women tank commanders

The 'retroreflector' reflects sound in the direction it came from

Stealth material hides hot objects from infrared eyes

ROCKET SCIENCE
Navy contracts with GenDyn for aircraft gun systems

GenDyn wins contract for foreign sales of rockets, warheads

Switzerland wants to sell arms to states in 'internal conflict'

New EU 'peace fund' could buy weapons

ROCKET SCIENCE
Australia passes foreign meddling laws amid China tensions

Cambodian strongman's son assumes powerful military roles

US weighs withdrawing troops from Germany: report

Mattis in Asia, fixing Trump-rattled relationships one by one

ROCKET SCIENCE
Squeezing light at the nanoscale

A new way to measure energy in microscopic machines

AI-based method could speed development of specialized nanoparticles

Researchers use magnets to move tiny DNA-based nano-devices