ISSUED BY: GCIS Communications Command Center
SOURCE: PHYSORG
24February2011 10:00pmEST
GCIS SPACE SECURITY UPDATE: A robot freighter laden with seven tonnes of supplies docked flawlessly on Thursday with the International Space Station (ISS), its European controllers said.
The Johannes Kepler teamed up with the ISS at 1708 GMT after an eight-day orbital flight covering some 2.5 million miles, live coverage of the operation showed.
After the control room burst into applause, engineers began running through a checklist to ensure that the Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) had moored securely.
The operation was scheduled to be followed at 2150 GMT by the launch of Discovery, NASA's oldest and most journeyed space shuttle, whose trip to the ISS will be its final mission.
After liftoff aboard an Ariane 5 super-rocket on February 16, the supply ship used advanced navigation and onboard thrusters to automatically find its way to the ISS, orbiting at about 218 miles.
The 20-tonne vehicle is designed to supply the ISS with air, food and spare parts and lift the sprawling station -- which, tugged by Earth's atmosphere, has lost altitude -- by some 31 miles. (read full report)