Space Stations

Cygnus Solar Arrays Deployed, Heads to Station

By Marc Boucher
Status Report
October 18, 2016
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Cygnus Solar Arrays Deployed, Heads to Station
The Cygnus spacecraft and its solar arrays are displayed in this computer representation.
NASA

The Cygnus spacecraft’s solar arrays have deployed. The cargo ship will rendezvous with the International Space Station on Sunday, Oct. 23.
It will be grappled at approximately 7:05 a.m. by Expedition 49 Flight Engineers Takuya Onishi of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Kate Rubins of NASA. After Cygnus’ capture, ground controllers will command the station’s arm to rotate and install it on the bottom of the station’s Unity module. It is scheduled depart the space station on Nov. 18.

Science investigations aboard Cygnus on their way to the space station also include commercial and academic payloads in myriad disciplines, including:

– Saffire II, the second in a series of experiments to ignite and study a large-scale fire inside an empty Cygnus resupply vehicle after it leaves the space station and before it re-enters Earth’s atmosphere to improving understanding of fire growth in microgravity and safeguarding future space missions.

– Cool flames, an investigation into a phenomenon where some types of fuels initially burn very hot and then appear to go out — but actually continue to burn at a much lower temperature with no visible flames.

– Controlled Dynamics locker- equipment that can minimize fluctuations and disturbances in the microgravity environment that can occur onboard a moving spacecraft that can enable a new class of research experiments.

NanoRacks Black Box- a platform that can provide advanced science capabilities and is specially designed for near-launch payload turnover of autonomous payloads including use of robotics, new automated MixStix and NanoLab-style research.

SpaceRef co-founder, entrepreneur, writer, podcaster, nature lover and deep thinker.