Missile warning satellite loaded onto rocket at Cape

Launch of Atlas V set for Thursday

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Plans for the next rocket launch from Cape Canaveral have taken a big step forward.

A new missile warning satellite for the military was loaded Thursday onto an Atlas V rocket.

The rocket is set to blast off Thursday from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

Meanwhile, SpaceX is set to try again Saturday in California to get its Falcon 9 rocket back into space. The private company has been grounded since a launch pad explosion at Cape Canaveral last year.

And in other space news, astronauts are taking another spacewalk to plug in new and better batteries outside the International Space Station.

It's the same type of job that was conducted last Friday 250 miles up. This Friday, commander Shane Kimbrough was back at it. But he was joined by French astronaut Thomas Pesquet.

The spacewalkers will plug in three lithium-ion batteries, the latest in space tech. That's on top of three hooked up last week.

Just like last week, the station's robotic handyman saved the spacewalkers considerable time by removing the old nickel-hydrogen batteries in advance and positioning the new ones. The long-armed robot is named Dextre, short for dexterous.

NASA said the lithium-ion batteries are critical long-term upgrades to the station's solar power system.

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Pesquet is the first French spacewalker in 15 years.


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