Orbital's cargo ship arrives at space station

Orbital's cargo ship arrives at space station

WASHINGTON - Agence France-Presse
Orbitals cargo ship arrives at space station

An Orbital Sciences Corp. Antares launches from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va. on Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. AP Photo

Orbital Sciences Corporation's unmanned Cygnus cargo ship on Sunday arrived at the International Space Station on the company's first regular supply mission to the research outpost. The capsule officially berthed with the space station at 1305 GMT nearly two hours after a robotic arm reached out and grabbed the incoming cargo carrier, according to the US space agency NASA's television network. US astronaut Mike Hopkins and his Japanese colleague Koichi Wakata operated the space lab's 57-foot Canadian-made mechanical arm, known as the Canadarm, which connected with Cygnus at 1108 GMT.
 
"Basically capturing something that is free-floating in space right next to you going so fast ... with so much at stake, that is the tricky part," said astronaut Cady Coleman, who narrated the capture from Earth for NASA TV.
 
The crew used the robotic arm to guide Cygnus to its berthing port on the Earth-facing side of the Harmony node for the installation process, according to NASA. The rendezvous -- the term given to the moment when the arm grasps the capsule -- "goes by pretty fast" said Coleman. "You train and train and you practice and practice, and that's what it comes down to." The mission is the first official resupply trip for Orbital's cargo ship, coming on the heels of the company's successful demonstration flight and berthing at the ISS in September.
 
Cygnus is delivering 2,780 pounds (1,260 kilograms) of supplies to the space station, including hardware, food and equipment for science experiments. The astronauts will use its contents to help conduct studies on everything from ant behavior to antibiotic drug resistance to the physics of liquid motion as it applies to fuel used by rockets, among other research.
 
According to NASA, a hatch will be opened later in the day or on Monday to begin unloading the items.
 
The spacecraft will eventually be packed with disposable items. It will remain at the station until mid-February.
 
After Cygnus detaches, it will burn up on re-entry to Earth's atmosphere and will disintegrate over the Pacific Ocean. SpaceX is due to send its Dragon capsule to the ISS shortly afterward, for yet another cargo mission.
 
Both Orbital and SpaceX have contracts with NASA worth more than a billion dollars each to supply the space station over multiple trips, restoring US access to the ISS after the retirement of the space shuttle program in 2011. California-based SpaceX, owned by Internet entrepreneur Elon Musk, became the first private company to reach the space station with its Dragon capsule in 2012.
 
Cygnus's berthing at the ISS on Sunday marks the fifth mooring of a private vessel at the space station in two years.
 
NASA has announced that the life of the $100 billion International Space Station would be extended by an additional four years, or until 2024.
 
The space lab serves a global science collaborative and was launched in 1998. It had been expected to stay in operation until 2020.
 
Partnering agencies are NASA, the Russian federal space agency Roscosmos, the Canadian Space Agency, the European Space Agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.