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Japan's space freighter in orbit | Japan's space freighter in orbit |
(40 minutes later) | |
Japan has successfully launched its new space freighter from the Tanegashima base in the south of the country. | Japan has successfully launched its new space freighter from the Tanegashima base in the south of the country. |
The 16.5-tonne unmanned H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV) is on a mission to re-supply the space station. | The 16.5-tonne unmanned H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV) is on a mission to re-supply the space station. |
Its role is vitally important to the station project, which is set to lose the servicing capability of the US shuttle fleet next year. | Its role is vitally important to the station project, which is set to lose the servicing capability of the US shuttle fleet next year. |
The freighter left Earth atop an H-IIB rocket at 0201 local time on Friday (1701 GMT, Thursday). | The freighter left Earth atop an H-IIB rocket at 0201 local time on Friday (1701 GMT, Thursday). |
Separation from the rocket's upper-stage was confirmed some 15 minutes later. | Separation from the rocket's upper-stage was confirmed some 15 minutes later. |
The HTV mission is being directed by engineers in Tsukuba, Japan, and at the US space agency's (Nasa) mission control in Houston. | The HTV mission is being directed by engineers in Tsukuba, Japan, and at the US space agency's (Nasa) mission control in Houston. |
The vehicle must conduct a number of tests of its navigation and rendezvous systems before making a close approach to the International Space Station (ISS). | |
Docking is not expected to take place until at least day eight of the mission. | Docking is not expected to take place until at least day eight of the mission. |
The freighter is carrying about 4.5 tonnes of cargo. | |
"This HTV-1 vehicle is a demonstration flight to verify its functionality and performance," said Masazumi Miyake, one of the Japanese space agency's (Jaxa) senior officials in the US. | |
"After completion of this mission we are planning to launch one operational HTV per year on average." | |
Grab and dock | |
The flight to orbit marked the first time Jaxa had used the H-IIB rocket, a beefed up version of the existing H-11A launcher. | |
The rocket incorporates additional solid-fuel boosters and a second main engine on its core stage to achieve significant extra thrust. | |
Unlike all previous spacecraft to visit the International Space Station (ISS), the HTV will not drive all the way into the orbiting platform. | |
Instead, the Japanese ship will simply park itself under the bow of the ISS to allow the station's robotic arm to grab it. | |
The vessel will then be locked into an Earth-facing docking port on the Harmony (Node 2) connecting module. | |
Safety will be the primary concern for the ISS astronauts. The robotic vessel will be monitored constantly to see that it is behaving as expected. | |
"[The astronauts] can command the vehicle to abort, to retreat or to hold. They can also command the grapple fixture to separate in case there is a failed capture," said Dana Weigel, a US space agency (Nasa) flight director for the mission. | |
The HTV will remain attached to the ISS for about six weeks while its supplies are unloaded. | |
In addition to the cargo (3.6t) carried in its pressurised compartment (accessed from inside the ISS), the ship has important cargo (900kg) mounted on a pallet in an unpressurised compartment. | |
These exterior supplies include two new Earth-observation experiments for the exposed "terrace" of instruments that sits outside Japan's Kibo science module. | |
Again, astronauts will use the station arm to remove the pallet before handing it across to the Kibo arm, which will then position the new experiments. | |
As the freighter's supplies are used up, the ship will be filled with station rubbish. Ultimately, it will undock from the ISS and take itself into a destructive dive into the atmosphere somewhere over the south Pacific. | |
When the US shuttles retire at the end of next year or the beginning of 2011, the ISS project will become dependent on five robotic freighters for its logistics: | |
HTV and Dragon are particularly important because of their ability to deliver larger items in their unpressurised compartments that would not normally fit through a docking port. | |
Length: 9.8m; Diameter: 4.4m; Vehicle Mass: 10.5t; Max cargo: 6tPressurised cargo: Food, clothing, water, laptops, science equipment, etcExternal cargo: Equipment to study Earth's oceans and the atmosphereFirst unmanned vehicle to deliver both pressurised and unpressurised cargo | Length: 9.8m; Diameter: 4.4m; Vehicle Mass: 10.5t; Max cargo: 6tPressurised cargo: Food, clothing, water, laptops, science equipment, etcExternal cargo: Equipment to study Earth's oceans and the atmosphereFirst unmanned vehicle to deliver both pressurised and unpressurised cargo |
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk | Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk |