NASA MEDIA ADVISORY M14-028

NASA Television Airs Departure of Commercial Cargo Ship from Space Station

Orbital Sciences' Cygnus cargo spacecraft, which delivered almost a 
ton-and-a-half of supplies and scientific experiments to the International 
Space Station in January, will complete its month-long mission to the orbiting 
laboratory Tuesday, Feb. 18.

NASA Television will provide coverage of its departure beginning at 6 a.m. EST.

Expedition 38 Flight Engineer Michael Hopkins of NASA, with the assistance of 
Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, will use the station's 
robotic arm to detach and release Cygnus. The pair will operate from the 
station's cupola robotics workstation.

Now loaded with trash, the U.S. commercial resupply craft will be detached from 
the Earth-facing port of the Harmony module about 5:30 a.m. and will be 
released at 6:40 a.m. Undocking coverage will be recorded and replayed during 
live coverage of Cygnus release.

On Wednesday, Feb. 19, after it has maneuvered to a safe distance away from the 
station, Cygnus will fire its engines twice in a maneuver that will enable it 
to slip out of orbit for a destructive entry into Earth's atmosphere. Cygnus 
will burn up over the Pacific Ocean. The deorbit sequence will begin shortly 
after 8 a.m. There will be no television coverage of Cygnus' deorbit.

For more details about Cygnus' mission and the activities of the International 
Space Station Expedition 38 crew, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

-end-



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