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Fri, Aug 30, 2013

NASA To Preview Orbital Sciences Flight To Space Station

Event To Be Held Following Flight Readiness Meeting Next Week

NASA will host an event to preview the upcoming test flight of Orbital Sciences Corp.'s Cygnus cargo spacecraft to the International Space Station. The event will originate from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston at the conclusion of a meeting in which senior NASA managers, space station partners and Orbital Sciences officials will evaluate the spacecraft's readiness for flight and be shown on NASA TV. Cygnus is scheduled for launch Tuesday, Sept. 17, from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.

During the test flight to the station, the Cygnus vehicle will test out several of its systems and capabilities. Once the space station flight control team has verified the results of these objectives, the spacecraft will be cleared to approach the station several days after launch. It will undergo a series of further tests and maneuvers and will ultimately arrive underneath the station, where the onboard crew will use the station's robotic arm to capture the cargo ship and install it on the bottom side of the station's Harmony module.

Briefing participants will be:

  • Michael Suffredini, International Space Station program manager
  • Alan Lindenmoyer, Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program manager
  • Frank Culbertson, Orbital Sciences Corp. executive vice president
  • Courtenay McMillan, NASA flight director 

Orbital Sciences Corp. is the second of NASA's two partners taking part in the Commercial Orbital Transportation Services Program. The goal is to work with private and public companies to create two new U.S. cargo vehicles to serve the needs of the space station crew. The first company, SpaceX began its work in 2006. After a successful test flight in 2012, it began flying regular cargo missions to the station. Orbital Sciences Corp. began its work in 2008 and will begin regular missions to the space station after the demonstration flight.

(Image proved by Orbital Sciences Corp.)

FMI: www.nasa.gov/orbital

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