NASA's cargo spacecraft back down to earth with heavy payload

IANS  |  Washington 

SpaceX's cargo splashed down in the on Saturday after nearly four weeks in space.

splashed down successfully about 10:37 a.m. EST (1537 GMT) west of Baja California, completing the second resupply mission to and from the (ISS) with a commercial spacecraft, said via Twitter, reported.

It carried approximately 4,100 pounds of cargo, science and from the ISS.

The departed from the ISS at 4.58 a.m., after they used the robotic Canadarm2 to detach from the Harmony module of the orbiting lab.

After was released from ISS and its thrusters transported it a safe distance away from the station, SpaceX's flight controllers in Hawthorne, California, executed a deorbit burn command, blasting back into Earth's atmosphere.

The will be taken by ship to Long Beach, California, where some cargo will be removed immediately for return to NASA, and then it will be prepared for a return trip to SpaceX's test facility in McGregor, Texas, for final processing, according to

said a variety of technological and biological studies had returned with

Hardware from the Made in Space Fiber Optics payload, which demonstrated manufacturing filaments in a micro-gravity

The investigation pulled wire from a commonly used to make glass.

Research indicates that the fiber pulled in micro-gravity may not crystallize as much, giving it better optical qualities than the silica used in most wire. Results from this investigation could lead to the production of higher-quality products both in space and on Earth.

Some payload samples were used to study a stress reaction in plants when experiencing reduced oxygen or hypoxia, which occurs for example, during times of soil flooding.

Such natural low oxygen events are sensed by plants and can lead to either changes in growth and development to aid in the plant' s survival, or in extreme cases, lead to significant losses in productivity and even death.

These experiments may help provide molecular targets for manipulation to help make plants more tolerant of low oxygen conditions and so contribute to agriculturally important traits such as crop flood tolerance.

Mice from a study are expected to return live to Earth for additional study.

The investigation evaluated a new device for administering continuous low doses, which could help counteract muscle wasting and prevent the need for daily or frequent drug administration.

A tiny capsule, implanted under the mouse's skin, delivers a constant, low dose of a drug via a silicone membrane, with channels as narrow as 1/50,000 the width of a human hair.

The drug, called formoterol, is a common therapy in asthma inhalers and for other lung diseases that relaxes muscles responsible for tightening a patient's airways. The low-dose delivery also could help avoid the known side effects of taking high doses long-term.

is the only space station resupply currently able to return cargo to Earth.

The lifted off from 40 at in the U. S. state of on Dec. 15 carrying about 4,800 pounds of supplies and scientific cargo on the company's 13th commercial resupply mission to the station. It arrived at the 17.

--IANS

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First Published: Sun, January 14 2018. 03:22 IST