April 3, 2008 -- A new European cargo ship flew up to the International Space Station and docked Thursday, successfully delivering food, water and clothes in its orbital debut. The unmanned cargo ship, called Jules Verne, was operated by flight controllers at a European Space Agency center in Toulouse, France. NASA's Mission Control in Houston and Russia's control center outside Moscow kept close tabs on the operation, which culminated in the morning linkup more than 200 miles above the Atlantic. So did the three space station residents. Twice over the past week, flight controllers in Toulouse guided Jules Verne to close encounters with the space station. The practice gave them confidence that the spacecraft's systems would perform as planned for the docking. Indeed, everything went smoothly with the automatic linkup following a 26-day flight. "Around the world in 26 days, the European Space Agency's Jules Verne...has pulled into port at the international space station," announced Mission Control commentator Rob Navias in Houston. Jules Verne -- one of the European Space Agency's major contributions to the space station -- rocketed away from French Guiana on March 9 with several tons of oxygen, fuel, water and other supplies. It had to wait for shuttle Endeavour to leave the orbiting complex; Endeavour's mission ended last week. Jules Verne is named after the French science fiction writer who wrote about extraordinary voyages under the sea, through the air, and into space. His 19th-century works included "Around the World in 80 Days" and "From the Earth to the Moon." Some of the author's original notes were packed aboard the spacecraft to commemorate its maiden voyage, along with a copy of "From the Earth to the Moon" and its sequel, "Around the Moon." NASA flight director Brian Smith said he did not know when the items would be returned to Earth. What It's Like to be an Astronaut |
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