Saturday, May 26, 2012

Gotcha! Robot arm plugs SpaceX Dragon into the ISS

Paul Marks, senior technology?correspondentDragon_grapple.jpg"Looks like we caught a dragon by the tail." The relief in the words of ISS astronaut Don Pettit was audible as he grabbed the uncrewed SpaceX Dragon spacecraft using a robotic arm today - marking the first time a civilian-designed spacecraft has shown docked with the space station.

Once held fast, the arm - steered by ISS crew - orientated the Dragon correctly and moved it in to dock with the standard non-Russian docking hatch called a Common Berthing Mechanism. The historic docking followed a morning in which the spacecraft underwent a series of control tests - such as approaching the ISS and then retreating a precise distance to order - to prove that it is controllable in an emergency. The idea was to prevent a repeat of the 1997 accident when a Russian Progress cargo freighter collided with the Mir space station?(video) and caused a dangerous depressurisation and power loss (luckily all on board survived)."Dragon started backing away as it was meant to do, reaching a 250-metre hold position," said NASA on its online TV channel. It successfully completed follow up manoeuvres to 36 metres, then 30 metres - using thermal imaging and laser radar (LIDAR) data to double check it's range. For a time the thermal and LIDAR range data were not in agreement - but after the numbers "converged" later Dragon was finally given a 'go' to berth with the ISS.?
Effectively, Dragon's docking repeated a spectacular cosmic manoeuvre pioneered by Japan's unmanned cargo supply ship, the H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV), on its first two successful missions. This involves a precision flight alongside the ISS that allows the station's 18-metre-long robotic arm, Canadarm2, to grasp the spacecraft and - literally - plug it into a docking hatch.A standard ISS robotic handhold unit,?called a power data grapple fixture, allows the arm's grippers to safely and firmly grasp units to which they are attached. Indeed, a series of such fixtures dotted around the station allows Canadarm2 to self-relocate, moving end-over-end like an inch worm. A grapple fixture attached to Dragon allowed the Canadarm2 to grasp it.On Saturday, the hatch will be opened to the pressurised capsule so the ISS crew can unload the cargo - which as you can see from the flight manifest includes astronaut rations, clothes, laptops and a bunch of zero-g experiments.

Unlike all other ISS resupply cargo vessels - the Russian Progress, European ATV and Japan's HTV - Dragon's overarching advantage if that it is designed to be recoverable via an Apollo-style ocean splashdown. Re-entry, and a splashdown with a return cargo intact, will be SpaceX's next challenge in two weeks time.

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine

sign of the times keystone pipeline purim acc tournament big ten tournament big east tournament 2012 solar storm

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.