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SpaceX Successfully Launches Supplies, Including Mice, To International Space Station

The SpaceX CRS-19 mission launched supplies to the International Space Station from Cape Canaveral. ELIZABETH GONDAR/WMFE

Around 5,700 pounds of supplies are on the way to the International Space Station after launching from Cape Canaveral Thursday. SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launched a cargo capsule packed with supplies and science experiments to the station.

On board — a fleet of mice for a muscle degeneration experiment, a new A.I. robot to help the station crew along with supplies to support more than 50 experiments at the station.

The capsule, which has already flown to the station twice, will arrive Sunday. It will spend about a month docked to the orbiting lab before returning to Earth.

SpaceX successfully landed the first stage of the rocket on a drone ship in the Atlantic, off the coast of Jacksonville. SpaceX lands and recycles the boosters to lower the cost of launches.

The launch was delayed one day due to upper-level winds at the launch site and rough seas at SpaceX’s drone ship landing site.

NASA pays private companies like SpaceX to launch supplies to the station. It’s the private company’s 19th mission under the contract.

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