Daily Archives: September 26, 2019

Gov’t Claimants Want Insys Bankruptcy Converted To Ch. 7 – Law360

Posted: September 26, 2019 at 12:46 pm

Law360 (September 25, 2019, 8:52 PM EDT) -- The team leading the plaintiffs in the national opioid litigation case pending in Ohio federal court asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge to convert the Chapter 11 case of opioid maker Insys Therapeutics to a Chapter 7 liquidation because the company has sold off the bulk of its assets and is no longer operating in a meaningful way.

In its motion for conversion, the court-appointed claimants' leadership team said it is made up primarily of local, county and state government entities, with hundreds of claims against Insys for costs incurred in responding to the national opioid crisis, and that every day the...

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Gov't Claimants Want Insys Bankruptcy Converted To Ch. 7 - Law360

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Factbox: Countries’ different reactions to Thomas Cook bankruptcy – Reuters

Posted: at 12:46 pm

(Reuters) - British travel operator Thomas Cook (TCG.L) ran hotels, resorts and airlines ferrying 19 million people a year to 16 different countries. It currently has 600,000 people abroad, forcing governments and insurance companies to coordinate a huge operation to bring them all home.

The last Thomas Cook flight, coming from Orland, U.S., arrives in Manchester, Britain, September 23, 2019, in this still image from social media. Gareth J Bond via REUTERS

Here is a summary of official responses to the Thomas Cook collapse:

The UKs Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), regulator and government have a fleet of planes ready to start bringing home more than 150,000 British customers abroad over the next two weeks.

French organization Enterprises de Voyage said that about 10,000 French tourists could be affected by the bankruptcy of Thomas Cook.

Norwegian subsidiary Ving said that currently 8,685 Norwegians are on its tours.

The Norwegian Travel Guarantee Fund, an insurance scheme that is compulsory for tour operators, issued a statement saying it will ensure any passengers traveling with Thomas Cooks Norwegian unit will be repatriated.

Danish subsidiary Spies said that none of its planes will be leaving, and about 1,400 travelers are affected. A press contact in Thomas Cook said that affected travelers will get their trips refunded.

Thomas Cook unit Oy Tjreborg says it has a total of 2,884 passengers currently traveling. We are currently doing all we can to arrange return flights for passengers and will provide more information during the day, the company said on its website.

The Swedish unit Ving said the number of Swedish passengers currently away came to 16,956. We are now working intensely to ensure that all affected travelers are flown home with as little disruption as possible, the company said on its website.

The Russian tour operator subsidiary, Intourist said the bankruptcy of Thomas Cook will have no impact on clients, Russian Executive Director Sergei Tolchin told Interfax.

Thomas Cook holiday airline Condor says it will continue its flight operation despite its parent companys insolvency.

Condor ... is continuing operations, the German airline said in a statement.

Thomas Cook says there are roughly 140,000 holidaymakers currently traveling with its German units.

As of Monday morning the Netherlands and Belgium units of Thomas Cook were still operating.

The Polish unit Neckermann said its financial condition is stable and it continues to operate normally, with holidaymakers unaffected.

A Greek tourism ministry official told Reuters that about 50,000 tourists are stranded.

The top priority now is to get them back home, the official said, declining to be named.

Cyprus says 15,000 Thomas Cook customers are stranded on the island.

We will work intensively... I believe that a large portion of the arrivals we stand to lose will somehow be regulated by the market and other travel agencies, said Savvas Perdios, deputy minister of tourism to Reuters.

Spanish Airport operator Aena (AENA.MC) says 46 flights operated by Thomas Cook have been canceled in Spanish airports. Between 25,000 and 30,000 tourists are affected in the Canary Islands, according to local media.

The Turkish Ministry of Tourism said it will provide support for local companies affected by the Thomas Cook collapse.

The Hotelier Federation head said about 45,000 tourists from the UK and Europe are in the country.

Thomas Cook (TCG.L) operator Blue Sky Group said that 25,000 reservations in Egypt booked up to April 2020 had been canceled. Blue Sky currently has 1,600 tourists in Egypts Hugharda resort

Tunisian tourism minister Rene Trabelsi told Reuters that 4,500 Thomas Cook customers are still on holiday in Tunisia.

Reporting by Tommy Lund and Jagoda Darlak; Editing by Hugh Lawson, William Maclean

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Factbox: Countries' different reactions to Thomas Cook bankruptcy - Reuters

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The ‘Warren Buffett of China’ could lose $1.5 billion in Thomas Cook’s bankruptcy – Business Insider

Posted: at 12:46 pm

When Thomas Cook, the storied British travel agency that filed for bankruptcy on Monday, needed financial help in recent years, it turned to the Chinese investment firm Fosun International.

Since 2015, the Shanghai-based conglomerate and its chairman, Guo Guangchang, have built up a massive, 18% stake in Thomas Cook, The Guardian reported. The stake was worth as much as $1.5 billion in recent weeks, according to regulatory filings compiled by Bloomberg, before the company became officially insolvent on Monday.

By August, Fosun and Thomas Cook had managed to agree on a deal that would give Fosun 75% control of Thomas Cook's tour business and 25% of its airline, Reuters reported at the time. However, that deal fell through in September, The Guardian reported, as new debts piled up near the end of the summer holiday season.

Thomas Cook is far from Fosun's only stake in Western companies as 52-year-old Guangchang seeks to emulate American "oracle" Warren Buffett. It also owns major stakes in France's competing tour agency Club Med, Cirque du Soleil, an English football club the Wolverhampton Wanderers, insurance and real-estate companies, and more.

"Our goal is very clear. We need to create a Buffett-style investment company, rooted in China but with global capabilities," he told the BBC in a 2014 interview.

Still, he has plenty of room to run. Forbes estimates Guangchang's wealth at $6.3 billion, making him the 41st-richest person in China. For comparison, Buffett is worth an estimated 10 times more, roughly $82.5 billion.

An earlier version of this story incorrectly said Fosun's 18% stake in Thomas Cook was "controlling." It is not a majority stake, despite Fosun being the company's largest shareholder. It also has no board representation, a representative said.

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Soyuz ferries three crew members to space station – Spaceflight Now

Posted: at 12:46 pm

STORY WRITTEN FORCBS NEWS& USED WITH PERMISSION

A Soyuz rocket carrying a Russian commander, a NASA co-pilot and a United Arab Emirates guest cosmonaut blasted off from Kazakhstan Wednesday, chased down the International Space Station and glided in for a picture-perfect docking, kicking off an unprecedented end-of-year schedule that includes up to a dozen spacewalks.

With Soyuz MS-15/61S commander Oleg Skripochka at the controls, flanked on the left by flight engineer Jessica Meir and on the right by Hazzaa Ali Almansoori, the Soyuz-FG rocket roared to life and climbed away at 9:57:43 a.m. EDT (6:57 p.m. local time), the moment Earths rotation carried the pad into the plane of the stations orbit.

The launching came one day after the Japanese space agency launched an unpiloted HTV cargo ship toward the station carrying a set of replacement batteries for the labs solar power system and equipment to help repair a $2 billion cosmic ray detector.

After a problem-free climb to space, Skripochka and Meir monitored a four-orbit rendezvous with the space station, moving in for docking at the aft port of the Russian Zvezda module at 3:42 p.m.

Standing by to welcome their new crewmates aboard were Expedition 60 commander Alexey Ovchinin, fellow cosmonaut Alexander Skvortsov, European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano and NASA astronauts Nick Hague, Christina Koch and Drew Morgan. The first major item on the expanded crews agenda is arrival of the HTV cargo ship Saturday morning.

Five spacewalks are planned next month to replace 12 aging batteries with six more powerful lithium-ion power packs carried up in the HTVs cargo bay.

Another half dozen EVAs are planned in November and December to repair the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, an unprecedented sequence that will come amid ongoing cargo delivery missions, a full slate of on-board research, a Russian spacewalk and possible visits by commercial crew ships being built by Boeing and SpaceX.

Meir, who holds a private pilots license and a doctorate in marine biology, served as Skripochkas co-pilot in the Soyuzs cramped cockpit, trained to take over in an emergency and fly the spacecraft if needed. Shes also received spacewalk training and hopes to venture outside the station at some point during her stay.

Skripochka is making his third trip to the station and is expected to participate in a Russian spacewalk in November. He is a veteran of three previous EVAs.

Hes a great guy, Meir said. Hes an experienced cosmonaut, so he brings a lot of knowledge and experience to the table for us. Its my first spaceflight and Hazzaa Ali Almansoori, the very first astronaut from the United Arab Emirates, is also brand new, hes only been training as an astronaut for a year. So we often look to Oleg for advice.

Almansoori is the tenth Spaceflight Participant to visit the lab complex and the first since Cirque du Soleils Guy Laliberte in 2009.

This mission is a great milestone, for me personally and for my country, the United Arab Emirates, and for the whole Arab region in general, Almansoori said in a preflight briefing. Im looking forward to joining the crew on the station and to work with them on a daily basis and to conduct experiments. Im looking forward to coming back with knowledge and experience to share with everyone.

A jet fighter pilot, Almansoori is sponsored by the UAE government. But as with earlier space tourists, he will enjoy a relatively short stay in orbit eight days before returning to Earth Oct. 3 with Ovchinin and Hague, who are wrapping up a 202-day mission.

Ovchinin, Hague and Koch took off aboard the Soyuz MS-12/58S spacecraft on March 14. Kochs stay aboard the station has been extended to February and she will join Skvortsov and Parmitano for the ride home aboard their Soyuz MS-13/59S spacecraft after nearly a year 328 days in space.

Koch will set a new record for longest single flight by a female astronaut on Dec. 28, moving past Peggy Whitsons mark of 289 days.

Almansoori will take Kochs seat aboard the MS-12/58S ferry ship coming down on Oct. 3. Morgan, who launched with Skvortsov and Parmitano on July 20, will join Skripochka and Meir when they return to Earth next April. His flight will span 255 days.

The Soyuz launching Wednesday, along with Japans launch of an HTV cargo ship Tuesday (U.S. time), kicks off one of the most challenging station schedules ever attempted with up to 11 U.S. spacewalks planned between now and the end of the year and a Russian EVA in November.

Along with the HTV-8 arrival Saturday, the crew expects to welcome three more cargo ships and, possibly, Boeings CST-100 Starliner crew ferry ship if NASA clears it for launch before the end of the year on a long-awaited unpiloted test flight.

Boeing and SpaceX are both building commercial crew ferry ships to end NASAs sole reliance on the Soyuz. But the program has suffered a series of funding shortfalls and technical problems, and its not yet clear when either company will be clear to launch astronaut crews on initial test flights.

Its a critical issue for NASA because the Russians only plan to launch two Soyuz spacecraft next year, one in March and the other in October. In the absence of an American ferry ship, the station crew will drop from six to three next April when Skripochka, Meir and Morgan return to Earth.

SpaceXs first piloted test flight, known as Demo-2, is on hold following an explosion during a ground test in April that destroyed an earlier vehicle. The Demo-2 mission, whenever it eventually flies, will carry two NASA astronauts to the station for an eight-day mission.

Boeings first piloted test flight, a mission known as CFT, will last a full six months, and that is the flight NASA is counting on to keep the station fully staffed until one or both companies begin operational crew rotation flights.

A lot of the commercial crew dates have been a little bit in flux lately, Meir said. But it does look like we should be seeing the (unpiloted) Boeing flight, I think that will happen during our mission, and Ive been receiving training on the ground to help make sure that that mission is successful.

We do also, of course, hope we see some of the first commercial crew astronauts during our mission. That would be excellent. The key is being flexible and being able to adapt. Thats something our training really allows us to do. Well be ready for any scenario.

The upcoming spacewalks pose the most significant near-term challenge with five needed to install the batteries brought up aboard the HTV-8 spacecraft and up to a half dozen needed to repair the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a high-priority particle physics experiment mounted on the stations power truss.

The AMS instrument was not designed to be repaired by spacewalking astronauts and NASA planners say the EVAs needed to fix a failing pump and carry out other upgrades represent the most complex spacewalks since repairs of the Hubble Space Telescope. The AMS EVAs will be carried out by Parmitano and Morgan.

The battery installation work is not as technically complex, but it poses additional challenges, requiring spacewalkers to work near the limit of the robot arms reach on the far left end of the stations solar power truss. NASA has not yet named the astronauts who will carry out the battery work, but Meir, Koch and Morgan have all been trained.

Im really looking forward to the potential to do a spacewalk, since thats really what Ive always envisioned myself doing, really, my whole life, Meir said.

The stations power truss stretches the length of a football field and features eight huge solar wings, four on each end arranged in pairs. The arrays rotate like slow-motion paddle wheels as the station flies through its orbit to maximize the amount of sunlight reaching the solar cells.

When the station is in sunlight, power is fed directly to the labs myriad electrical systems. At the same time, they re-charge four sets of massive batteries housed at the base of each set of arrays. When the station moves into orbital darkness, the batteries seamlessly kick in to keep the station powered.

The stations eight electrical power channels originally were supported by 48 nickel-hydrogen NiH2 batteries, six per channel. Twenty-four batteries, in two sets of 12, were mounted at the bases of the solar array wings on the starboard, or right, side of the stations main truss with two sets of 12 on the port, or left, side.

But the original batteries have lost strength over the years and NASA is in the process of replacing all four sets with 24 smaller, more efficient lithium-ion Li-Ion batteries. The replacement units pack twice the punch, so only six are needed per set.

The HTV-6 cargo ship delivered the first set of replacements in December 2016. They were installed on the starboard 4, or S4, solar array segment during two spacewalks in January 2017. NASA installed a second set, delivered by the HTV-7 cargo ship, last September on the port 4, or P4 arrays.

The third set, launched Tuesday, will be installed on the far left end, or port 6, segment of the power truss.

Assuming the work goes smoothly, NASA managers hope to begin the AMS repair work in early to mid November. Five to six spacewalks may be necessary.

The $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a project led by Nobel laureate Samuel Ting, was designed to detect high energy cosmic rays and measure any antimatter that might be present to learn more about dark matter, dark energy and by extension, the evolution of the cosmos. The instrument was carried up on the next-to-last shuttle mission and installed in May 2011

Its a pretty incredible piece of machinery, its actually measuring high energy radiation, cosmic rays coming from different stars, it is looking for evidence of antimatter and dark matter to begin to answer more questions about the origin of our universe, Meir said.

Unfortunately, one of the pumps thats vital to the thermal control system of that instrument is broken. Well, its not broken yet, but it is degrading. And so were going to do a series of spacewalks during the mission in order to fix that pump. It wasnt designed to be fixed (in space).

That makes the work kind of like the Hubble Space Telescope scenario where you didnt actually design tools for it or interfaces for it, Meir said. So its a very complex and challenging spacewalk, and were very excited to conduct that during our mission.

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NASA Wants to Test New Moon Spacesuits on the Space Station in 2023 – Space.com

Posted: at 12:46 pm

If NASA is ever going to send astronauts back to the moon by 2024, it's going to need new spacesuits for lunar exploration. But before astronauts ever don those suits on the moon, they'll test "walk" them on the International Space Station in 2023, according to the engineer backing the program.

NASA's Artemis moon program aims to land the first astronauts at the south pole of the moon in 2024, but the agency's current spacesuit design called the Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or EMU is designed for floating spacewalks (also known as extra-vehicular activities or EVAs), not clambering around a rocky, lunar surface.

NASA's in-house Advanced Space Suit Project is one of several spacesuit efforts the agency has pursued in recent years, to develop ways to explore deep space. In November 2016, according to a 2017 NASA Office of Inspector General report, the project centered its efforts on a new generation of EVA suit, now known as the xEMU. And so far, the agency is still holding to its timeline of testing the xEMU in orbit in 2023.

Related: The Evolution of the Spacesuit in Pictures

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

NASA is developing the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU, as a spacesuit for astronauts on the moon as part of the Artemis program.

(Image credit: NASA)

"We've made a lot of progress and iterated on this design, so now we have a very mature system overall," NASA spacesuit engineer Lindsay Aitchison said Sept. 11 during the American Astronautical Society's Wernher von Braun Memorial Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama.

So far the xEMU has gone through more than 30 runs in the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory, the huge swimming pool astronauts use to train for spacewalks, Aitchison said.

The xEMU recently passed its preliminary design review, which is a major development stage showing that the baseline design appears to be operationally effective. Next up is design development testing, Aitchison added, followed by testing a full version of the suit on the ISS in 2023. Only if the spacesuit passes those orbital trials would it be used by astronauts on the lunar surface in 2024.

While the Trump administration only told NASA in March to land on the moon in 2024, the agency has been working on improving its exploration-class (or planetary surface-based) spacesuits for more than a decade. The iconic Apollo moon spacesuit of the 1960s was based on a design that is more than 50 years old, so today's engineers are looking to create something more flexible based on what we have learned about astronauts and human factors since then.

In 2017, the OIG criticized NASA for spreading its recent spacesuit development among multiple programs, resulting in $200 million spent but leaving the agency "years away from having a flight-ready spacesuit capable of replacing the EMU or suitable for use on future exploration missions." At the time, NASA said the report "is a fair assessment of the current state of Extravehicular Activity (EVA) systems", but said the OIG was "overly critical" of the data and products supplied to explain the Constellation Space Suit System contract, which was terminated some years after the George W. Bush-era Constellation moon-to-Mars program was canceled in 2010. NASA added that some of the CSSS deliverables "may be used to reduce risk for current International Space Station (ISS) EVA systems."

More Photos: NASA's Futuristic Z-2 Spacesuit Design in PicturesRelated: NASA's Z-2 Spacesuit: How It Works (Infographic)

Yet the agency appears to be using multiple spacesuit ideas to inform the design of its newer xEMU.

Aitchison mentioned various spacesuit designs that influenced xEMU, all the way back to the early 1990s. Among the spacesuits she cited were ILC Dover's Mark III used in a NASA field testing program called Desert Research and Technology Studies or Desert RATS and the more recent Z-1 spacesuit and Z-2 spacesuit prototypes that ILC Dover and NASA introduced in the last decade.

"NASA has actually been investing in a very methodical matter how we're going to do exploration spacesuit development," Aitchison said, including implementing "lessons learned" from the ISS program. Among the changes: the xEMU suit will have a smaller display unit on the front of the suit, making it easier to fit a wider range of NASA's astronaut population, Aitchison said.

In March, NASA backed away from plans to run the first all-female spacewalk because there were not enough EMU spacesuits immediately available on the ISS, in the correct size, for the two scheduled astronauts to use. Modifying the Hard Upper Torso unit on the EMU for taller (or shorter) astronauts generally takes about 12 hours of work, so NASA elected to shuffle spacewalk assignments rather than take time away from experiments and more urgent repairs on the ISS. Following this situation, NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine told the House science committee that future spacesuit designs would better accommodate the range of sizes the astronaut population requires.

Another consideration for xEMU is it will be able to run missions on the future Gateway space station at the moon, as well as for lunar exploration or for landing on Mars, Aitchison said. xEMU's design can be changed to accommodate different missions, she explained, by swapping out some components to keep the astronauts safe in these different environments.

As for ILC Dover, the company (along with Collins Aerospace) introduced an "Astro" suit in August that can be used for floating spacewalks, moon exploration or Mars exploration. The new suit system is aimed at both NASA and commercial space partners for future lunar and Martian exploration.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Japan Is Launching an Unpiloted Cargo Ship to the Space Station Today. Watch Live – Space.com

Posted: at 12:46 pm

A unpiloted Japanese resupply ship will launch to the International Space Station today (Sept. 24) after a two-week delay due to a launchpad fire and you can watch the liftoff live online.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will launch the unpiloted spacecraft HTV-8 (also known as Kounotori8) toward the space station from the Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan atop an H-IIB rocket. Liftoff is scheduled for 12:05 p.m. EDT (1605 GMT). It will be 1:05 a.m. Wednesday at the launch site. You can watch the launch live here via NASA TV at 11:30 a.m. EDT (1530 GMT). JAXA is offering its own webcast here beginning at 11:47 a.m. EDT (1547 GMT).

HTV-8 is hauling more than 4 tons of supplies to the International Space Station for the outpost's six-person crew. JAXA and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which built the H-IIB rocket, tried to launch the HTV-8 mission on Sept. 10, but a fire on the launchpad just below the rocket forced them to call off the launch.

Video: How Japan's HTV Cargo Ships WorkRelated: Japan's HTV Space Truck Explained (Infographic)

A Mitsubishi Heavy Industries-built H-IIB rocket carrying the HTV-8 cargo ship for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency stands atop its launchpad at Tanegashima Space Center for a Sept. 24, 2019 launch.

(Image credit: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries)

MHI representatives have said the fire, a first for the company and JAXA, was caused by an unexpected concentration of flammable oxygen vapors at the pad. "We have taken corrective measures and have confirmed normal functioning of the rocket and facility," they said in a statement.

"Launch providerMitsubishi Heavy Industriesidentified the root cause for the fire and set the new launch date after corrective measures were put in place," NASA officials wrote in a statement.

"Named Kounotori, meaning white stork in Japanese, the craft will deliver six new lithium-ion batteries and corresponding adapter plates that will replace aging nickel-hydrogen batteries for two power channels on the station's far port truss segment," NASA officials said in a statement. "The batteries will be installed through a series of robotics and spacewalks by the stations crew members later this year."

Also riding aboard HTV-8 are a small, experimental satellite optical communication system called SOLIS (designed to allow 100Mbps downlink speeds from the space station), the experiment Hourglass to test the effects of gravity on powder and granular material and an upgrade for the station's Cell Biology Experiment Facility, NASA officials added.

Japan's HTV cargo ships are brilliant gold, cylindrical spacecraft designed for one-time delivery trips to the International Space Station. They launch on JAXA's H-IIB rockets built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, hence their name: H-II Transfer Vehicle, or HTV.Photos: Japan's Robotic Space Cargo Ship Fleet

Each HTV spacecraft includes internal compartment which astronauts can access from inside the station and an external payload area for exterior equipment like the new solar array batteries. At the end of their missions, HTV vehicles are filled with trash and released to intentionally burn up in Earth's atmosphere.

HTV-8 is currently scheduled to arrive at the International Space Station early Saturday (Sept. 28), where it will be captured by astronauts using the orbiting laboratory's robotic arm. The spacecraft will then be attached to an available docking port on the station's Harmony module.

NASA will webcast HTV-8's arrival at the space station on Saturday beginning at 5:45 a.m. EDT (0945 GMT), with robotic arm capture scheduled for 7:15 a.m. EDT (1115 GMT).NASA's webcast will resume at 9:30 a.m. EDT (1330 GMT) on Saturday to cover HTV-8's attachment to the Harmony module.

Email Tariq Malik attmalik@space.comor follow him@tariqjmalik. Follow us@SpacedotcomandFacebook

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Russia: We Know Cause of Space Station Leak but Haven’t Told NASA – Futurism

Posted: at 12:46 pm

Not Telling

In August 2018, flight controllers detected a tiny, easily-plugged hole in the International Space Station. Now, the head of Russias space agency is claiming it has finally figured out the cause of the mysterious puncture but its keeping the information under wraps.

We know exactly what happened, but we wont tell you anything, Roscosmos Director Dmitry Rogozin told attendees at a youth science conference, according to Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.

Young space enthusiasts arent the only people Roscosmos isnt sharing the info with, either. It seems NASA Russias primary partner in the ISS is still in the dark, too.

They have not told me anything, NASA head Jim Bridenstine told the Houston Chroniclein reference to Roscosmos claim. I dont want to let one item set (the relationship) back, but it is clearly not acceptable that there are holes in the International Space Station.

Initially, officials assumed the hole was caused by a micrometeorite that punctured a compartment. But further investigation revealed that the hole appeared to have been caused by drilling from inside the capsule, prompting Rogozin to suggest it could have been an act of deliberate sabotage.

Whether thats the conclusion Russia ultimately reached or not, everyone involved in the ISS deserves to know what caused the hole especially if it involved foul play.

READ MORE: Roscosmos Knows What Caused The Hole in The ISS, and NASA Wants Answers [ScienceAlert]

More on the ISS hole: Cosmonaut: Hole Was Drilled From Inside Space Station

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Russia shows off rocket that will launch astronauts to International Space Station – Fox Business

Posted: at 12:46 pm

Russia is getting readyto launcha Soyuz MS-15 spaceship with a Soyuz FG booster rocketto the International Space Stationfrom Kazakhstan on Wednesday.

Along for the ride will be the first astronaut from the United Arab Emirates, Hazzaa Al Mansouri,as well asU.S. astronaut Jessica Meirand Russian cosmonautOleg Skripochka.

Russia's Soyuz-FG booster rocket with the Soyuz MS-15 space ship that will carry new crew to the International Space Station (ISS) is transported from its hangar to the launch pad at the Russian leased Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, Monday, Sept. 23, 2019. The new Soyuz mission to the International Space Station (ISS) is scheduled on Wednesday, Sept 25 with Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka, U.S. astronaut Jessica Meir and United Arab Emirates astronaut Hazza Al Mansouri. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)

After the United States' Space Shuttle program ended in 2011,the Soyuz rocket program became the sole transportation method for the American astronautstraveling to the International Space Station.And as a result, the price of booking a ride for American astronauts on Russia's rocket is very high; the current cost of a ticket is $80million.

The Soyuz rocket first was usedin 1966.

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The launch is scheduled for 9:57 a.m. ET Wednesdayfrom Russian-operated Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

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How to Watch the International Space Station Fly Over the US: Flight Path, Time and More Info – Newsweek

Posted: at 12:46 pm

People along the East Coast will be able to catch a glimpse of the International Space Station as it flies over part of the United States two nights this week.

The space station will light up the sky Thursday and Friday. As long as skies are clear, people all across the eastern U.S. from Atlanta up to Boston will be able to see the station twinkling amongst the stars around 8:46 p.m. ET on Thursday and around 7:58 p.m. ET on Friday.

However, the orbiting laboratory will only be visible for a few momentsit travels at a speed of 17,500 miles per hourand the time in which it passes over each state will vary. The space station is typically the brightest and most visible during dusk and dawn. Viewers can get a more accurate time frame of when the station will be visible in their state by checking NASA's website.

The space station will be the third brightest object in the sky, according to NASA. The high-flying spacecraft orbits at an average altitude of roughly 250 miles above the Earth. Its passage over the Eastern U.S. marks the completion of one of the many orbits around the globe the station has made this year. A new international crew of six astronauts is expected to board the station on September 25.

The station was first launched into space in 1998 and the first crew arrived in November 2000. Astronauts have occupied the spacecraft, which is about the size of an American football field, continuously ever since. The ship features six sleep quarters, two bathrooms and a gym.

The spacecraft serves as a science laboratory for astronauts where they can conduct research that couldn't be achievable on Earth and conduct experiments that can be applied to everyday life on Earth. They also study the effects of microgravity on the human body along with learning how to keep a spacecraft functioning properly for extended periods of time. Peggy Whitson, who spent 665 days aboard the station, holds the record for the most days any human has ever spent in space.

More than 2,400 research investigations have been completed by scientists from more than 103 countries.

Astronauts are responsible for the maintenance and repairs of the space station, which means they often have to go outside the spacecraft to fix things, resulting in crews conducting more than 200 spacewalks outside the space station.

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How to Watch the International Space Station Fly Over the US: Flight Path, Time and More Info - Newsweek

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Watch as Maine astronaut Jessica Meir arrives at the International Space Station – Bangor Daily News

Posted: at 12:46 pm

By Christopher Burns, BDN Staff September 25, 2019 2:42 pm Updated: September 25, 2019 3:23 pm

Jessica Meir will complete her six-hour space flight Wednesday afternoon when she reaches the International Space Station, some 220 miles above the Earth.

Meir, along with Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka and Emirati astronaut Hazz Al Mansouri, blasted off aboard the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 9:57 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. They will reach the International Space Station about 3:45 p.m.

Meir, a Caribou native, is the third Mainer, and first Maine woman, to slip the surly bonds of Earth.

You can read more about todays launch here.

You can rewatch this mornings space launch here.

You can read more about Meir here.

Have feedback? Want to know more? Send us ideas for follow-up stories.

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Watch as Maine astronaut Jessica Meir arrives at the International Space Station - Bangor Daily News

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