Watch SpaceX’s 32nd Cargo Dragon spacecraft undock from the ISS today

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Live 4K video of Earth and space: 24/7 Livestream of Earth by Sen’s 4K video cameras on the ISS – YouTube
Live 4K video of Earth and space: 24/7 Livestream of Earth by Sen’s 4K video cameras on the ISS - YouTube


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A SpaceX cargo Dragon is scheduled to depart the International Space Station (ISS) today (May 22), after about a month docked with the orbital laboratory.

NASA will livestream the undocking on its NASA+ streaming platform. You can also watch the action in the window above via Sen’s 4k 24/7 high-definition cameras, which are mounted on the station’s exterior.

Dragon is scheduled to undock at 12:05 p.m. EDT (1605 GMT); NASA’s coverage will begin 20 minutes before that.

photo taken from the international space station showing two white space capsules docked to the station, with the curve of earth in the background

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Endeavour (bottom center) and a visiting uncrewed Cargo Dragon supply ship (foreground), are seen docked at the International Space Station’s Harmony module in September 2021. (Image credit: NASA)

After maneuvering a safe distance away from the ISS, Dragon will begin a series of deorbit burns to place the spacecraft on a return trajectory for a planned splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on Friday (May 23). No livestream of the splashdown will be available, but NASA is expected to provide updates on the agency’s ISS blog.

The splashdown will bring an end to a mission known as CRS-32, because it’s the 32nd that SpaceX is flying via NASA’s Commercial Resupply Services program.

CRS-32 launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 21. The spacecraft docked with the zenith port of the station’s Harmony module a day later, delivering around 6,700 pounds (3,040 kilograms) of food, equipment and scientific experiments to the station.

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Dragon will carry cargo back down to Earth as well. Exterior materials samples from NASA’s Multipurpose International Space Station Experiment (MISSE-20) have been stowed inside the CRS-32 capsule, as have an Astrobee robot, the REACCH (Responsive Engaging Arms for Captive Care and Handling) technology demonstration and other experiments. The spacecraft will also be packed with a number of other rotational items from the ISS stores, as well as non-recyclables marked for disposal.

Dragon is currently the only operational cargo vehicle capable of such two-way deliveries. The others — Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus spacecraft and Russia’s Progress vehicle — are designed to burn up during their reentry through Earth’s atmosphere.

Boeing’s astronaut-carrying Starliner spacecraft is also capable of storing cargo within its crew cabin, but issues with the spacecraft during its crew flight test last summer have delayed its qualification to enter into the space station’s official fleet.

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