A Japanese supply ship rocketed toward the International Space Station on Tuesday, two weeks after a launch pad fire halted the first countdown.
Japanese officials traced the fire to static electricity and oxygen propellant, and corrected the problem.
The four-ton shipment should arrive at the space station on Saturday.
Liftoff of Japan's HTV-8 cargo craft to deliver new batteries and science experiments to the station! The space freighter is due to arrive Saturday at 7:15am. #AskNASA | https://t.co/yuOTrZ4Jut pic.twitter.com/iwRUVqtG2Q
— Intl. Space Station (@Space_Station) September 24, 2019
Spacewalking astronauts will install the six new lithium-ion batteries later this year, replacing old-style batteries. The cargo ship is named Kounotori, Japanese for white stork.
The Japanese Space Agency is one of several organisations making periodic station deliveries. Russia sends up supplies, as do SpaceX and Northrop Grumman on NASA’s behalf.
Russia, meanwhile, plans to launch three astronauts to the space station Wednesday, including the first person from the United Arab Emirates bound for orbit.
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