NASA to Provide Coverage of Next Cygnus Resupply Mission

WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. (NASA PR) — Northrop Grumman’s next NASA resupply services mission to the International Space Station is targeted for launch at 5:39 p.m. EST Sunday, Feb. 9. Live coverage of the launch and briefings will begin at 5 p.m. on NASA Television and the agency’s website.
The company’s 13th commercial resupply services mission using its Cygnus cargo spacecraft is scheduled to launch on its Antares rocket from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.
Loaded with approximately 8,000 pounds of research, crew supplies, and hardware, the Cygnus spacecraft, dubbed the SS Robert H. Lawrence, will arrive at the space station Tuesday, Feb. 11 at about 4:30 a.m. NASA Flight Engineer Andrew Morgan will grapple Cygnus and NASA astronaut Jessica Meir will be acting as a backup. After capture, the spacecraft will be installed on the Unity module’s Earth-facing port.
The Cygnus spacecraft is scheduled to remain at the space station until May 11, when it will depart the orbiting laboratory. The Saffire-IV experiment will be conducted within Cygnus after it departs the station, and prior to deorbit, when it also will dispose of several tons of trash during a fiery reentry into Earth’s atmosphere May 25.
Media registration for the launch and associated activities is closed. Media can submit questions during the prelaunch news conference and the What’s on Board briefing using #askNASA.
Complete coverage of launch activities is as follows (all time Eastern):
Saturday, Feb. 8:
11 a.m. – Prelaunch News Conference
· Ven Feng, manager, International Space Station Transportation Integration Office, NASA’s International Space Station program
· Heidi Parris, assistant program scientist, International Space Station Program Science Office
· Jeff Reddish, project manager, Wallops Range Antares
· Frank DeMauro, vice president and general manager, Tactical Space Systems, Northrop Grumman
· Kurt Eberly, Antares vice president, Launch and Missile Defense Systems, Northrop Grumman
3 p.m. – What’s on Board Briefing
· Heidi Parris, assistant program scientist, NASA’s International Space Station Program Science Office
· Patrick O’Neill, marketing and communications senior manager, International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory
· Caitlin O’Connell, principal investigator, and Devin Ridgely, chief biologist, Mobile Space Lab, Scorpio-V, HNu Photonics
· Bruce Hammer, principal investigator, and Louis Kidder, co-investigator, OsteoOmics, University of Minnesota
· Christopher Own, facility manager and chief executive officer, and Lawrence Own, co-facility manager, Mochii, Voxa
· Gary Ruff, project manager, Saffire-IV, NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland
Sunday, Feb. 9:
5 p.m. – Launch coverage begins
Tuesday, Feb. 11
3 a.m. – Capture of Cygnus with the space station’s robotic arm
6 a.m. – Cygnus installation operations coverage
Cargo resupply from U.S. companies ensures a national capability to deliver critical science research to the space station, significantly increasing NASA’s ability to conduct new investigations at the only laboratory in space.
Learn more about the Northrop Grumman mission by going to the mission webpage at:
One response to “NASA to Provide Coverage of Next Cygnus Resupply Mission”
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I will boycott because of the Russian engines which they do not have to use and never did as they had and have SRB RSRM that will do the job. Never would have had the explosion and loss of NASA cargo NASA if you had told them to use SRB. Hopefully the turbo pumps will not fail this time. But what ever the companies want to do. Right NASA. Love those Russian engines NASA. NASA loves to take chances with LRB when they don’t have to with SRB. The GAO should suggest they use SRB. Not patriotic N-G to use Russian engines. Your SRB N-G may be more expensive but they are safer and made by American workers. Russia interfered in our ’16 election and is trying to again N-G. You are bad people.