|      A private cargo capsule's trip home to Earth from the International Space Station has been delayed by one    day to Tuesday because of weather concerns near its targeted splashdown site. SpaceX's unmanned Dragon spacecraft is    now scheduled to splash down at 12:36 p.m. EDT (1636 GMT) on Tuesday (March    26) in the Pacific Ocean, 246 miles (396    kilometers) off the coast of Baja California, NASA    officials announced Friday (March 22). Dragon will be carrying    about 2,670 pounds (1,210 kilograms) of equipment, hardware and scientific    experiments, none of which should be affected by the slight delay, officials    said. "The additional day    spent attached to the orbiting laboratory will not affect science samples    scheduled to return aboard the spacecraft," NASA    officials wrote in a Friday update. Dragon launched toward    the space station on March 1 and arrived two days later with about 1,200    pounds (544 kg) of supplies. The capsule's current mission is the second of    12 cargo deliveries California-based SpaceX is making under a $1.6 billion    deal with NASA. Dragon is slated to be    released from the orbiting lab at 7:06 a.m. EDT (1106 GMT) on Tuesday. Its    deorbit burn will take place 4 1/2 hours later, setting the stage for its    Pacific Ocean splashdown. SpaceX personnel will retrieve the capsule with a    crane-equipped boat and return it to shore about 30 hours later, NASA    officials said. SpaceX is one of two    companies that hold a commercial cargo deal with NASA. The other is    Virginia-based Orbital Sciences, which scored a $1.9 billion contract to make    eight unmanned flights with its Antares rocket and Cygnus capsule. Antares is slated to make    its first test flight in the middle of April, and a demonstration mission to    the space station should follow later this year if all goes well. Dragon, for    its part, first visited the orbiting lab on a demonstration flight in May of    last year and made its first contracted cargo run in October. Copyright 2013 SPACE.com,    a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be    published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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