Space station supply ship exits

The Cygnus commercial cargo space ship has ended its month-long visit to the International Space Station.

A commercial cargo ship has ended its month-long space station visit.

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station released the Cygnus supply ship, now full of rubbish for disposal early on Friday. They parted company 260 miles (420km) above Africa's southwest coast.

Orbital Sciences Corp launched the Cygnus from Virginia in mid-July under a NASA contract. The unmanned craft hauled more than 3000 pounds (1400kg) of crucial cargo to the orbiting outpost. Now it's loaded with rubbish, some 3500 pounds' worth.

"All the best wishes," German spaceman Alexander Gerst radioed to the company's flight controllers.

On Sunday, the Virginia-based Orbital Sciences will steer the craft down through the atmosphere to burn up. The six space station astronauts will attempt to record the fiery re-entry for engineering analysis.

The same documentation will be done when a European supply ship departs early next year. That ship, launched from French Guiana, delivered its shipment just a few days ago.

NASA and its international partners - Russia, Europe, Japan and Canada - want to learn as much about atmospheric re-entry as possible to prepare for the space station's eventual demise in the decade or two ahead.

Orbital Sciences Corp is one of two US companies hired by NASA to deliver space station goods. The California-based SpaceX will make its next supply run next month.


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