SpaceX's Dragon cargo ship heads back to Earth

AFP  |  Tampa (US) 

SpaceX's unmanned cargo ship left the today carrying 1,800 kilograms of gear and prepared to splash down in the by mid-afternoon, said.

The white supply vessel detached from the orbiting outpost at 9:23 AM (local time), fired its engines three times and slowly began its journey to Earth.

"Release confirmed," said on TV, noting that separation occurred as the ISS was 411 kilometers above the Earth, passing over just south of

"is safely on its way."

A parachute-assisted splashdown is expected off the coast of around 3 PM (local time), but will not be broadcast on TV.

The is bringing back a host of science experiments, including lab mice that were studied in orbit to see how their bones changed in microgravity.

"Other critical biological samples preserved in science freezers, such as plants, insects and human tissue, have also been transferred into for retrieval and analysis," said a NASA statement.

SpaceX's Dragon is currently the only cargo ship designed to return to Earth intact. The other US commercial supply ship, Orbital ATK's cargo carrier, burns up on re-entry to Earth's atmosphere.

The cargo ship arrived April 4 after launching from Cape Canaveral, Florida, with 2,600 kilograms of food, supplies and science experiments to enable the study of thunderstorms, anti-cancer drugs, and technology to remove debris in orbit.

The mission was the 14th for under a USD 1.6 billion contract with NASA to resupply the space station over multiple years.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, May 05 2018. 20:40 IST