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[b]ATV [i]Edoardo Amaldi[/i] launches to space station[/b] The European Space Agency's (ESA) ATV [i]Edoardo Amaldi[/i] lifted off from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, Friday (March 23) at 04:34 GMT (05:34 CET, 01:34 local, 11:34 p.m. CDT March 22) on an Ariane 5 launcher, operated by Arianespace, heading toward the International Space Station. The Automated Transfer Vehicle, the most complex spacecraft ever produced in Europe, is now en route to deliver essential supplies to the orbital outpost. It will also reboost the space station's orbit while it is attached for about five months. ATV [i]Edoardo Amaldi[/i] is the third in a series of five supply ships developed in Europe to fulfill its obligation toward the exploitation costs of the station. This vessel is the first to have been processed and launched within the target rate of one per year. "Europe providing an annual service to the station becomes a reality due to the dedication, competence and interaction of our space industry, national agencies and ESA," said Jean-Jacques Dordain, ESA's Director General. "ATV-3 demonstrates Europe's capacity to deliver regular high-profile missions to support demanding crewed spaceflight operations, in coordination with our international partners." ATV features high-precision navigation systems, highly redundant flight software and a fully autonomous self-monitoring and collision-avoidance system with its own independent power supplies, control and thrusters. "We are proud that ESA is providing the most sophisticated vehicle servicing the space station," said Thomas Reiter, ESA's Director of Human Spaceflight and Operations. "Based on the capabilities and knowhow that ESA and European industry developed in the context of the ATV programme, we have now the opportunity to further evolve this technology. This will open up a wide range of opportunities for us to contribute to future ventures in space exploration." The launcher with its 20-ton payload started its flight over the Atlantic towards the Azores and Europe. An initial eight-minute burn of Ariane's upper stage took ATV-3 into a low orbit inclined at 51.6 degrees to the equator. After a 42-minute coast, the upper stage reignited to circularise the orbit at an altitude of 162 miles (260 km). About 64 minutes into flight, the supply ship separated from the upper stage. Twenty-five minutes later, ATV-3 started deploying its four solar wings, which was completed a few minutes later, marking the end of the launch phase. [i]Edoardo Amaldi[/i] is now making a series of maneuvers to rendezvous with the space station on March 28 at the projected time of 22:34 GMT (5:34 p.m. CDT) where it will dock under its own control with Russia's Zvezda module. During the mission, the ferry is being monitored by the ATV Control Center (ATV-CC), in collaboration with space station control centers in Moscow and Houston. ATV-CC is located in Toulouse, France, on the premises of the French space agency, CNES.
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