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International Space Station

    Station Orbits Higher as Crew Preps for Spacewalk and New Spaceship

    The Soyuz MS-14 spacecraft is processed for launch

    The International Space Station is orbiting higher today as the Expedition 60 crew continued setting up for next week’s spacewalk. The orbiting residents also focused on space biology experiments and packing gear for return to Earth. A docked Progress 73 (73P) spacecraft fired its thrusters overnight in two 10-minute burns three hours apart raising the …

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    Robotics Supporting Exploration; Briefers Talk Friday About Spacewalk

    Expedition 60 Flight Engineer Christina Koch of NASA

    The Expedition 60 crew is busy conducting space research everyday inside the International Space Station. While they work, scientists and engineers on Earth can remotely control and observe experiments attached to the outside of the orbiting lab. Researchers today concluded a run of the external Robotic Refueling Mission 3 experiment. Robotics controllers on the ground …

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    Crew Gets Ready for Next Spacewalk and New Spaceships

    NASA astronaut Nick Hague

    The International Space Station will soon see U.S., Russian and Japanese spaceships arriving and departing over the next several weeks. Meanwhile, the Expedition 60 crew is staying focused on an upcoming spacewalk while continuing ongoing microgravity research. Next week’s spacewalkers, NASA astronauts Nick Hague and Andrew Morgan, are reviewing their procedures and practicing their maneuvers …

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    Human Research Revealing Space Impacts as Spacewalk Preps Gear Up

    Expedition 60 Flight Engineer Andrew Morgan of NASA

    The Expedition 60 crew kicked off the workweek exploring stem cells and testing the printing of human tissue on the International Space Station. The astronauts are also gearing up for a spacewalk planned for next week. Operations continue inside the orbiting lab’s new BioFabrication Facility today. Astronaut Nick Hague printed more human tissue samples Monday …

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    Satellite Software Contest on Station as Crew Tests Organ Printing

    The Milky Way

    The International Space Station is the setting today for a student competition to control tiny, free-floating satellites aboard the orbiting lab. Meanwhile, the Expedition 60 crewmembers conducted a variety of research operations and continued configuring a pair of spacesuits. Middle school students are competing to design algorithms that autonomously control basketball-sized SPHERES satellites aboard the …

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    Crew Gears Up for Spacewalk, Scans Eyes and Practices Medical Emergency

    NASA astronaut Nick Hague

    The Expedition 60 crew is gearing up for an upcoming spacewalk to prepare the International Space Station for more commercial crew missions. Biomedical science also took up a portion of the astronauts’ day as they help researchers understand what happens to the human body in microgravity. NASA astronauts Nick Hague and Andrew Morgan are reviewing …

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    U.S. Cygnus Space Freighter Departs Station

    Cygnus Departs the Station

    The Cygnus spacecraft successfully departed the International Space Station three months after arriving at the space station to deliver 7,600 pounds of supplies and scientific experiments to the orbiting laboratory. The Cygnus spacecraft will now remain in orbit until mid-December and coincide with a second Cygnus spacecraft scheduled for launch to the space station in …

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    US Cargo Ship Preps to Depart as Crew Studies Bioprinting and Time Perception

    Astronauts Luca Parmitano, Andrew Morgan and Nick Hague

    A U.S. resupply ship is packed and ready to depart the International Space Station on Tuesday. The Expedition 60 crew is also testing the viability of printing organ-like tissue and exploring the impact of microgravity on time perception today. NASA astronauts Nick Hague and Christina Koch finished loading and closed the hatches to the Cygnus …

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    3-D Bioprinting, Grip Studies on Station May Benefit Earth and Space Systems

    Expedition 60 Flight Engineer Christina Koch of NASA

    The Expedition 60 crewmembers are busy conducting new and advanced science experiments today aboard the International Space Station. A U.S. space freighter will begin its secondary mission after it departs the station on Tuesday. 3-D bioprinting in space may become a viable platform in the future for fabricating human organs. NASA astronaut Christina Koch activated …

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