NASA's Latest Space Station Supply Run Includes Ice Cream

Orbital ATK successfully launched rocket from Virginia on Sunday
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 12, 2017 8:37 AM CST
NASA's Latest Space Station Supply Run Includes Ice Cream
Orbital ATK's Antares rocket sits on the 0A launch pad moments before a scheduled launch at the NASA Wallops Island flight facility in Wallops Island, Va., Saturday, Nov. 11, 2017. The launch of the rocket was postponed due to aircraft in the area.   (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

A stash of frozen treats and other supplies rocketed toward the International Space Station on Sunday, this time from Virginia's cold eastern shore. NASA's commercial shipper, Orbital ATK, launched the cargo ship just after sunrise from Wallops Island, aboard an unmanned Antares rocket. The Cygnus capsule should reach the orbiting lab Tuesday, reports the AP, and its 7,400 pounds of cargo include treats for any of the station's six astronauts with a sweet tooth. There are frozen fruit bars, ice cream bars, ice cream sandwiches, and cups of chocolate and vanilla ice cream—about 80 in all, according to NASA. This marked Orbital ATK's first launch from its home turf in more than a year. The last time it made a space station delivery, it used another company's rocket flying from Cape Canaveral.

Crowds gathered at Wallops in freezing temperatures and cheered as the rocket soared toward the southeast. Sunrise made it hard to see the launch farther afield. The field of visibility stretched from New England to the Carolinas. A launch attempt on Saturday was nixed after a plane strayed into the restricted airspace. Sunday's try was almost foiled by a couple of boats that briefly wandered into the keep-out zone. Orbital ATK named the capsule after the last man to walk on the moon, Apollo 17's Gene Cernan, who died in January. During the final minutes of the countdown, a launch controller paid tribute to Cernan as well as JR Thompson, a high-ranking NASA and Orbital ATK official who died last week. SpaceX is making a station delivery next month.

(More International Space Station stories.)

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