Weather
delays Orbital's return to International Space Station
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[December 04, 2015]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - Rain and
cloudy skies delayed Orbital ATK's planned resumption on Thursday of
cargo runs to the International Space Station, a year after the
company's Antares rocket exploded during launch.
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An Orbital Cygnus spacecraft, perched atop an Atlas 5 rocket from
United Launch Alliance - a Lockheed Martin Corp and Boeing Co joint
venture - had been slated for liftoff at 5:55 p.m. EST (2255 GMT).
But poor weather at the seaside Florida launch site forced ULA to
postpone the launch. The next opportunity is at 5:33 p.m. (2233 GMT)
on Friday.
The Cygnus, an upgraded cargo ship, is due to carry more than 7,700
pounds (3,500 kg) of food, clothing, supplies and science
experiments to the space station, including a prototype satellite
astronauts will put together like a Lego kit. Also aboard are two
Microsoft HoloLens headsets, which will provide station crew – and
onlookers in ground control centers – with digitally enhanced images
of whatever the astronauts are looking at.
Dulles, Virginia-based Orbital had completed two flights under its
original $1.9 billion NASA contract, delivering about 8,400 pounds
(3,800 kg) pounds of a promised 22 tons of supplies, when Antares
faltered on Oct. 28, 2014. Investigators blamed the botched launch
on a defective turbopump in one of Antares’ two main engines, a
Soviet-era motor refurbished and sold by Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings
. Exactly what went wrong remains a matter of debate, but Aerojet
paid Orbital $50 million to settle the dispute and the companies
ended their collaboration.
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Orbital accelerated plans to outfit Antares with new engines and
purchased two Atlas rocket rides to fly Cygnus capsules to the
station. Orbital expects to start using its own Antares rocket again
in May 2016.
Orbital is competing against privately owned Space Exploration
Technologies, or SpaceX, and Sierra Nevada Corp for follow-on
station cargo delivery contracts, now due to be awarded in January.
Resupplying the station has been a challenge for NASA, following not
only Orbital’s accident, but the loss of a Russian Progress ship in
April and a SpaceX Dragon capsule in June.
(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Tom Brown)
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