Spacecraft berthed to ISS. Credit:
ESA/NASA
With
less than two months left aboard the International Space Station, ESA astronaut
Tim Peake has been exceptionally busy with experiments and arriving spacecraft.
Tonight, the third supply vessel for the space laboratory in three weeks will
be launched and Tim will be at the helm to berth it on Sunday.
On
26 March, NASA astronaut Tim Kopra used the Station's 17 m-long robotic arm to
grapple and berth a Cygnus cargo craft, with Tim Peake monitoring the approach,
communicating with ground control and commanding the vehicle.
On
2 April, a Russian Progress docked itself to the Station after its predecessor
had left three days earlier filled with waste.
This
Sunday, Tim Peake will take the lead in berthing the eighth Dragon supply ship
using the Station arm from 10:30 GMT.
Each
new ship brings food, equipment and experiments that must be unloaded and
stored. Some experiments need to be moved quickly into a freezer, or run as
soon as possible before the contents perish.
Blood
vessels in space
One
experiment on Dragon will try to grow blood vessels in space. Spheroids is a
biological experiment involving human cells found on the inner layer of blood
vessels. These endothelial cells are in direct contact with the blood and
regulate factors such as blood pressure.
Ground
research suggests it might be possible to grow tube-like cell cultures that
resemble small, rudimentary blood vessels. Spheroids aims to understand why
and how endothelial cells form these structures, and how
they will adapt to microgravity.
Grappling Cygnus. Credit: ESA/NASA
Unloading the new experiments and supplies will see Tim Peake and his five crew-mates work through the weekend and into next week.
Follow
ESA's Principia blog for updates and to watch the launch and berthing of Dragon
live via NASA television.
ESA astronaut Tim Peake is pleased
to have received fresh fruit with the arrival of his new crew-mates on the
International Space Station. Tim commented on the picture: "Thanks Soyuz
46S crew for the fresh fruit…nothing quite like a juicy apple!" Credit:
ESA/NASA
http://phys.org/news/2016-04-busy-spacecraft-space-station.html#jCp
http://phys.org/news/2016-04-busy-spacecraft-space-station.html#jCp
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