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SpaceX Dragon bound for space station with tons of cargo

SpaceX Dragon bound for space station with tons of cargo A SpaceX Dragon cargo ship launching to the International Space Station late Friday marks the 20th and final flight under the company's original commercial resupply contract with NASA. The partnership has delivered more than 94,000 pounds of equipment and supplies to the lab complex over the past eight years at a cost of roughly $3 billion.  The Falcon 9 rocket and cargo Dragon launching Friday on the CRS-20 mission were scheduled for liftoff from pad 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 11:50 p.m. EST. Forecasters called for a 60% chance of acceptable weather. The California rocket builder has a follow-on contract with NASA covering another half-dozen flights to the space station through 2024 using a cargo version of SpaceX's Crew Dragon astronaut ferry ship. The first launch under the Commercial Resupply Services 2 contract is targeted for late October. As usual, the company plans to recover the rocket's previously-flown first stage with a return to Landing Zone 1 at the Air Force station. Going into Friday's launch campaign, SpaceX had successfully recovered 49 boosters, 31 on droneships, 16 at Cape Canaveral and two at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Eight landing attempts ended in failure.  Assuming a successful climb to space, the twice-flown Dragon capsule will set off after the space station, carrying out a carefully planned set of rocket firings to catch up up with the outpost early Monday. Capture by the lab's robot arm is expected around 5 a.m. The Dragon is loaded with 4,358 pounds of crew supplies, science gear and equipment, including a European Space Agency external experiment platform known as Bartolomeo that will be mounted on ESA's Columbus laboratory module, spare parts for the station's urine recycling system, rodent habitat hardware and a variety of other experiments. Also on board: an experiment by Delta Faucet that will take advantage of the weightless environment of space to study the physics of water droplets in hopes of improving shower heads. "Our struggle in this area is that regulations continue to push the flow rates down ... because we know that water is a precious commodity that we have to use very wisely," said Paul Patton, principal investigator of the droplet formation study. The goal of the research is to study the relationship between water droplet size and the momentum they carry to maximize the user experience while minimizing the amount of water required. "Most people, if you ask what they want, they want more pressure," said Garry Marty, a product engineer who has been with Delta for nearly four decades. "It's not really pressure, it's the momentum in the droplet. And that's what we're controlling. We just want to try to maximize that potential as best we can to continue to give customers a good feel while using less water." ESA's Bartolomeo platform, carried in the Dragon's unpressurized trunk section, will be pulled out by the space station's robot arm and locked in place on the forw

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