Back Again … Again: SpaceX Craft Heads for Historic 2nd Splashdown

A reused Dragon cargo spacecraft was release from the International Space Station today (July 3) for a return trip to Earth.

A SpaceX Dragon spacecraft has departed the International Space Station, finishing its historic second journey to the orbiting lab.

The space station’s robotic arm, Canadarm-2, released the spacecraft at 2:41 a.m. EDT (0641 GMT), beginning a 5.5-hour journey back to Earth. It will splash down in the Pacific Ocean, about 260 miles (420 kilometers) southwest of the California coast.

The cargo spacecraft was the first Dragon vehicle to be repaired and sent back into space for a second trip; it also ferried supplies, equipment and experiments to the space station in 2014. SpaceX personnel will recover the spacecraft and ferry it back to Long Beach, Calif. When it arrives, SpaceX will remove crucial cargo immediately to return for NASA analysis in Houston, NASA officials said in a blog post , and prepare the Dragon spacecraft itself to return to SpaceX’s test facility in McGregor, Texas.

The spacecraft initially brought close to 6,000 lbs. (2,700 kilograms) to the space station, and it is carrying more than 4,100 lbs. (1,900 kg) of cargo and experiments back to Earth for analysis. That cargo includes  an experiment that studied the impact of microgravity on fruit flys’ hearts, mouse samples from a test of an osteoporosis drug and a look at how stem cells react to microgravity.

But there’s one piece of cargo Dragon won’t be carrying: Originally the experimental Roll-Out Solar Array (ROSA) was supposed to be stowed in Dragon’s unpressurized trunk, which would be ejected to burn up in Earth’s atmosphere. But after the successful week-long test of the flexible solar panel, ground control was unable to roll it back up for storage. So instead, it’s making its own way to eventually burn up.

A ground team guided Canadarm-2 to detach the Dragon spacecraft from the station, before NASA astronauts Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson robotically released it while observing from the station’s cupola .

SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft is the only cargo craft that can return in one piece from the space station — Orbital ATK’s Cygnus spacecraft, Russia’s Progress craft and Japan’s H-11 Transfer Vehicle all burn up in Earth’s atmosphere on their return home.

Fischer, Whitson and Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin spent weeks packing the Dragon spacecraft before its departure while working on the station’s science investigations. They are also preparing for a Russian spacewalk coming later this year by maintaining and double-checking the country’s Orlan spacesuits. July 28, a Russian Soyuz spacecraft is scheduled to launch with additional crew.

Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains . Follow us @Spacedotcom , Facebook  and Google+ . Original article on Space.com .

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