A new Progress cargo carrier launched to the International Space Station at 4:22 p.m. EDT Wednesday with more than 2.3 tons of fuel, air, water, propellant and other supplies and equipment aboard.
The station's 29th Progress unpiloted spacecraft brings to the orbiting laboratory more than 770 pounds of propellant, more than 100 pounds of oxygen and air, about 925 pounds of water and 2,850 pounds of dry cargo. Total cargo weight is 4,657 pounds.
P29 launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. It is scheduled to dock at the Earth-facing port of the station's Zarya module Friday at about 5:30 p.m. It replaces the trash-filled P28 which was undocked from the Pirs docking compartment on April 7 and destroyed on re-entry.
P29 will use the automated Kurs system to dock to the station. Expedition 17 Commander Sergei Volkov will be at the manual TORU docking system controls, should his intervention become necessary.
Once Expedition 17 crew members have unloaded the cargo, P29 will be filled with trash and station discards. It will be undocked from the station and like its predecessors deorbited to burn in the Earth's atmosphere.
The Progress is similar in appearance and some design elements to the Soyuz spacecraft, which brings crew members to the station, serves as a lifeboat while they are there and returns them to Earth. The aft module, the instrumentation and propulsion module, is nearly identical.
But the second of the three Progress sections is a refueling module, and the third, uppermost as the Progress sits on the launch pad, is a cargo module. On the Soyuz, the descent module, where the crew is seated on launch and which returns them to Earth, is the middle module and the third is called the orbital module.