Astronauts on the area station used a robotic arm to launch the cargo ship,
called HTV-8, from the station at 1:21 p.m. EDT (1713 GMT) as the 2 spacecraft cruised 261 miles (420 kilometers) above the Pacific Ocean, simply west of the California coast.“Gone however not forgotten,” station astronaut Christina Koch of NASA, who managed the arm throughout HTV-8’s release,
wrote on Twitter later on.”Watching the HTV freight ship depart @Space_Station today and keeping in mindthe complex dance of the robotic arm that marked the beginning of its stay.”Video: Watch HTV-8 Leave the Space Station!Photos: Japan’s Robotic Space Cargo Ship Fleet The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s HTV-8 cargo ship is released back into space via robotic arm to end its shipment mission to the International Space Station on Nov. 1, 2019.(Image credit: NASA TELEVISION)HTV-8’s departure sets the phase
for the launch of a U.S. freight ship, the Cygnus NG-12 spacecraft constructed by Northrop Grumman,
from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Virginia. That mission is set up to introduce Saturday
(Nov. 2 )at 9:59 a.m. EDT (1359 GMT )and reach the station two days later to provide another 4 heaps of materials. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) released HTV-8 to the spaceport station Sept. 24 using an H-IIB rocket that raised off from the Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan. The spacecraft came to the station four days later on, providing more than 4 lots of materials-consisting of important brand-new batteries for the station’s solar ranges. Video: How Japan’s HTV Cargo Ships Work Related: Japan’s HTV Space Truck Explained(Infographic) Gone but not forgotten! Watching the HTV freight ship leave @Space_Station today and remembering the complex dance of the robotic arm that marked the start of its stay. The batteries being removed were later on set up by us on spacewalks– can’t beat that for teamwork! pic.twitter.com/UsJHFAWJTE November 1, 2019 HTV-8 invested 34 days connected to an Earth-facing port on the station’s U.S. Harmony module. On Saturday night(Nov. 2), the spacecraft will fire its thrusters to intentionally fall out of orbit. It is42042 expected to burn up over the Pacific Ocean. JAXA’s HTV spacecraft(the name is short for H-II Transfer Vehicles)are likewise called Kounotory(Japanese for”white stork”). They become part of an international fleet of robotic cargo ships that includes Russia’s Progress lorries, SpaceX’s Dragon, Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus spacecraft and the European Space Agency’s Autonomous Transfer Vehicles. Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com!.?.! or follow him@tariqjmalik. Follow us @Spacedotcom and Facebook. < img src="https://vanilla.futurecdn.net/space/media/img/missing-image.svg"alt ="All About Space banner"class="lazy-image lazy-image-loading lazyload optional-image" onerror=" if(
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