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What is SpaceX’s 2,900 kg cargo ship carrying to Int’l Space Station?

11:26 AM Dec 08, 2020 | Sharanya Alva |

SpaceX’s successfully launched Dragon capsule is carrying 6,400 pound (about 2,900 kg) supplies to the International Space Station (ISS), including 4,400 pound of research (1,995 kg).

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It’s carrying 40 mice that’ll be used to study the impact that living on ISS can have on astronauts’ bones and eyes. It’s also carrying a festive meal of roast turkey and shortbread biscuits.

It can also take a 20 per cent more volume of cargo than the previous supply ships of SpaceX. It can be reused up to five times, which is also an improvement over the three-flight use of the first-generation of Dragon capsules. Also, it can stay at the space station for 75 days, according to SpaceX.

The first-stage booster, that was making its fourth such flight, landed on a platform in the ocean after the launch. The new Dragon capsule can dock with the space station automatically after its planned 26-hours long journey, unlike the past Dragon crafts that had to be captured by astronauts with the help of a robot arm.

Dragon-2 will stay at the space station for about a month when it would undock with previous equipment and fall into the Atlantic Ocean.

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