In the Space Station processing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Advanced Colloids Experiment-Temperature control-1 (ACE-T-1) science payload is prepared for its flight to the International Space Station. Led by Chungnam National University in South Korea, developed by ZIN Technologies, Inc. of Ohio and sponsored by NASA, the ACE-T-1 experiment studies the way tiny, suspended particles form organized structures within water. ACE-T-1 is included in nearly 5,000 pounds of science and supplies set to launch aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on July 18 aboard SpaceX CRS-9, the company’s ninth Commercial Resupply Service mission to the ISS
Information
Taken in
Kennedy Space Center
Auteur
NASA/Michelle Stone
Description
In the Space Station processing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Advanced Colloids Experiment-Temperature control-1 (ACE-T-1) science payload is prepared for its flight to the International Space Station. Led by Chungnam National University in South Korea, developed by ZIN Technologies, Inc. of Ohio and sponsored by NASA, the ACE-T-1 experiment studies the way tiny, suspended particles form organized structures within water. ACE-T-1 is included in nearly 5,000 pounds of science and supplies set to launch aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on July 18 aboard SpaceX CRS-9, the company’s ninth Commercial Resupply Service mission to the ISS