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STATION NEWS
Japanese Cargo Spacecraft Docks with ISS
by Staff Writers
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Aug 12, 2013


The first HTV freighter was launched to the space station in September 2009.

A Japanese cargo freighter docked with the International Space Station on Friday, NASA said.

Nicknamed Kounotori-2 (Japanese for "white stork"), the HTV-4 freighter docked with the station after being pulled in by Canadian-built robotic arm Canadarm, operated by flight engineers Karen Nyberg and Chris Cassidy.

HTV-4 blasted off from southern Japan's Tanegashima Space Center on August 4 at 4:48 a.m. local time (7:48 p.m. GMT, August 3).

The spacecraft delivered about six tons of scientific gear, crew provisions and equipment, including a small Japanese-made robot, Kirobo, which will float inside the space station and transfer messages from Earth to Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata.

The first HTV freighter was launched to the space station in September 2009. Japan expects to send one of such cargo ship to the station each year until 2015.

Source: RIA Novosti

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The fourth Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency H-II Transfer Vehicle, or HTV-4 was installed on its berthing port on the Earth-facing side of the International Space Station's Harmony node at 11:38 a.m. EDT Friday, delivering 3.6 tons of science experiments, equipment and supplies to the orbiting complex. Flight Engineer Karen Nyberg, with the assistance of Flight Engineer Chris Cassidy, in ... read more


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