
SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon capsule roll out from the hangar for the CRS-2 launch to the International Space Station to deliver NASA cargo in March 2013.
Image: SpaceX, Ben Cooper
This story was updated at 10:45 a.m. ET.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A privately built unmanned spacecraft launched for NASA by the commercial spaceflight company SpaceX blasted into orbit Friday (March 1), but has experienced some sort of malfunction after separating from its rocket, the company says.
The robotic Dragon space capsule launched into orbit atop SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket in what appeared to be a smooth liftoff from a pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 10:10 a.m. ET (1510 GMT). But once in orbit, SpaceX officials reported a problem just after spacecraft separation, when the Dragon capsule was expected to deploy its solar arrays.
"It appears that, although it achieved Earth orbit, Dragon is experiencing some type of problem right now," SpaceX's John Insprucker said during the company's launch webcast.
The glitch appears to be related to Dragon's thrusters, which allow the capsule to maneuver in orbit.
"Issue with Dragon thruster pods," SpaceX founder Elon Musk wrote on Twitter. "System inhibiting three of four from initializing. About to command inhibit override." [Photos: SpaceX's Third Launch to Space Station]
SPACE.com will provide updates as new information is available.
Falcons and Dragons
This mission is Hawthorne, Calif.-based SpaceX's second of a dozen contracted supply flights to the space station, part of a $1.6 billion agreement with NASA's Commercial Resupply Services Program.
The commercial space company was started in 2002 by Musk, a billionaire entrepreneur who also founded PayPal. The company's Falcon 9 rockets are named after the fictional Millennium Falcon spaceship from "Star Wars," while the Dragon capsules get their moniker from the song "Puff the Magic Dragon," Musk has said.
Although storms threatened central Florida earlier in the week, the skies cleared in time, and the rocket was "go" for liftoff.
The Dragon capsule is due to deliver 1,200 lbs (544 kilograms) of scientific experiments and supplies to the space station after docking on Saturday at 6:30 a.m. ET (1100 GMT). Among its bounty is food for the astronauts, including fruits picked from the orchard of a SpaceX employee's father, Shotwell said. The capsule is also carrying a copy of the song "Up in the Air" by the American rock band Thirty Minutes to Mars for NASA astronaut Thomas Marshburn, a flight engineer on the station.
The orbiting outpost is currently home to six crewmembers, led by Expedition 34 commander Kevin Ford of NASA. Ford and Marshburn will use the station's robotic arm to grab the Dragon capsule and attach it to the station, NASA officials said.
The flight will be Dragon's third visit to the space station, following a test flight in May 2012 and its first contracted cargo delivery mission in October of that year. SpaceX has taken precautions to avoid an engine anomaly that caused one of the Falcon 9's nine Merlin rocket engines to shut down during the October liftoff. Although the failure didn't prevent Dragon from docking safely to the station, it did cause a secondary payload, a prototype Orbcomm OG2 communications satellite, to miss its intended orbit and fall back to Earth.
Waiting astronauts
The residents of the space station have been preparing for Dragon's docking for some time, said Mike Suffredini, the manager of the International Space Station program office at Johnson Space Center in Houston. Engineers on the ground helped the astronauts update the space station's computers, including new upgrades to the software that controls the robotic arm that is expected to grab onto the capsule, Suffredini added.



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2 Comments
Add CommentGlad there were no people on board.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisIts only money.
It docked just fine on Sunday, one day late. Nothing was lost.
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