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15 Years Ago: Japan launches HTV-1, its First Resupply Mission to the Space Station


Waspie_Dwarf

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15 Years Ago: Japan launches HTV-1, its First Resupply Mission to the Space Station

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On Sept. 10, 2009, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) launched its first cargo delivery spacecraft, the H-II Transfer Vehicle-1 (HTV-1), to the International Space Station. The HTV cargo vehicles, also called Kounotori, meaning white stork in Japanese, not only maintained the Japanese Experiment Module Kibo but also resupplied the space station in general with pressurized and unpressurized cargo and payloads. Following its rendezvous with the space station, Expedition 20 astronauts grappled and berthed HTV-1 on Sept. 17, and spent the next month transferring its 9,900 pounds of internal and external cargo to the space station and filling the HTV-1 with trash and unneeded equipment. They released the craft on Oct. 30 and ground controllers commanded it to a destructive reentry on Nov. 1.

htv-1-1.jpg.ce733dd88c6edd843eb19597bd1383d9.jpghtv-1-2.jpg.ce3573d8515aa5797f678b77c34f065b.jpghtv-1-3.jpg.d1c81ffcb093fa600e7a7084d7584d41.jpg

Left and middle: Two views of the HTV-1 Kounotori cargo spacecraft during prelaunch processing at the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. Right: Schematic illustration showing the HTV’s major components. Image credits: courtesy JAXA.

Read More: ➡️ NASA

 

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