Stork Set to Make Special Space Station Delivery
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The
HTV5 CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) Flight Crew Interface Test
(FCIT). CALET will search for signatures of dark matter and provide the
highest energy direct measurements of the cosmic ray electron spectrum.
Credits: NASA
The research this supply will support includes the CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) investigation, an astrophysics mission that will search for signatures of dark matter and provide the highest energy direct measurements of the cosmic ray electron spectrum. (Cosmic rays are high-energy radiation particles that impact the Earth’s atmosphere.) Investigators will measure these particles using a high-resolution telescope.
The investigation addresses many unresolved high-energy astrophysics questions that have puzzled scientists for decades, such as the origin of cosmic rays, how cosmic rays accelerate and travel across the galaxy, and whether dark matter and nearby cosmic ray sources exist. The investigation also may help characterize the radiation environment and the risks it may pose to humans in space. Additionally, CALET’s long exposure in space may yield evidence of rare interactions between “normal” matter and dark matter.
A
set of Cosmogia Dove CubeSats being launched during Expedition 40 from
the one of the NanoRack Cubesat Deployer (NRCSD) deployer mechanisms.
Expedition 44/45 crew members will launch additional CubeSats during
their mission. Credits: NASA
Other satellites being launched on HTV-5 include the GomSpace GOMX-3, a three-unit CubeSat mission to demonstrate aircraft Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast signal reception and geostationary telecommunication satellite spot beam signal quality, both of which are used for global aircraft tracking. The primary mission for the Aalborg University (AAU) student satellite AAUSAT5 is to receive Automatic Identification System (AIS) beacons from ships. The beacons are used to identify and locate vessels to support collision avoidance and search and rescue efforts.
Expedition
45/46 Commander, Astronaut Scott Kelly (right) along with his brother,
former Astronaut Mark Kelly (left) are the subjects of the Twins Study,
which studies, among other things, biomolecular responses to the
physical, physiological, and environmental stressors associated with
spaceflight. Credits: NASA
NREP will supply power to investigations, along with the capability to cycle commands and data to/from users on the ground. These studies also will have access to the vacuum of space, including extreme temperatures and radiation. Hosted items may include materials science, biology experiments, sensors, electronic components, and more.
Additional research supported by the HTV-5 cargo includes the Twins Study, a compilation of 10 investigations that will include, among other topics, integrated human -omic analyses. The analyses will help scientists better understand biomolecular responses to the physical, physiological, and environmental stressors associated with spaceflight. Key to these analyses is the collection of biological specimens like urine and blood from one twin in orbit on the space station and the collection of corresponding samples and data from his twin on Earth. Investigators will use the BD Vacutainer® CPT™ Cell Preparation Tubes arriving on the HTV5 for the collection of whole blood and the separation of mononuclear (or single nucleus) cells. Isolation of mononuclear cells from whole blood is a first step for obtaining the data necessary achieve the research objectives for three of the study’s investigations.
This fifth HTV mission certainly provides a bird’s-eye view of the research making an impact off the Earth for the Earth.
Source: NASA
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