Boeing’s Starliner Launch Will Bring New Cargo and Science to the Space Station

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The uncrewed flight includes a payload of food, provisions and a specialized flight-test dummy

Boeing’s Orbital Flight Test 2 mission to the International Space Station is poised to launch at 6:54 p.m. EDT on Thursday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.

Taking its second ride aboard Starliner will also be a flight test dummy affectionately named Rosie the Rocketeer. Rosie rode aboard the first OFT and provided engineers data about G-force exertion on the body during launch. For this flight, according to a Boeing statement, the same sensors used for Rosie on OFT-1 will be used to measure the strain on the vehicle’s four seats directly.

To date, NASA has completed over 3,000 experiments on the orbital lab, which has hosted rotating astronaut crews continuously since late 2000. These experiments, varying in their size and composition, make up a portion of the cargo regularly transported to, and sometimes back from, the International Space Station.

Speaking on NASA’s “Houston, We Have a Podcast,” Amy Comeau, project engineer for the Boeing Starliner chief engineer’s office, highlighted VESTA as the “main focus” of OFT-2’s goal to dock with the station. She described VESTA’s camera suite, which was designed to differentiate visual features of the space station in the same way a human would:

 

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Is this a Space Station version of the message to Putin responding to his threats - 'kiss my shiny metal ...' ?

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