Spacecraft named for 'Hidden Figures' mathematician launches from Virginia

Northrop Grumman's Antares rocket lifts off the launch pad at NASA's Wallops Island flight facility in Wallops Island, Va., on Saturday. The rocket is delivering cargo to the International Space Station.
A Northrop Grumman rocket lifts off the launch pad at NASA's Wallops Island flight facility in Wallops Island, Va., on Saturday. The rocket is delivering cargo to the International Space Station.
Steve Helber/AP

A space supply ship carrying some four tons of cargo bound for the International Space Station launched from Virginia on Saturday. The capsule is named for a Black mathematician whose contributions were featured in the Oscar-nominated film “Hidden Figures.”

The S.S. Katherine Johnson, a Northrop Grumman Cygnus capsule, is due to arrive at the International Space Station on Monday, bearing some 8,000 pounds of science and research supplies and vehicle hardware.

The cargo will help astronauts with a variety of projects: learning about muscle loss using worms; investigating astronauts' sleep quality; experiments for disease treatments; upgrades to the life support systems; testing equipment for moon missions and more.

"It's our tradition to name each Cygnus after an individual who's played a pivotal role in human spaceflight, and Mrs. Johnson was selected for her hand-written calculations that helped launch the first Americans into space, as well as her accomplishments in breaking glass ceiling after glass ceiling as a Black woman," Frank DeMauro, a Northrop Grumman vice president, said on Friday, according to Space.com.

Johnson died at age 101 on Feb. 24 of last year.

Johnson, while working for NASA — and its predecessor the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics — contributed to work on the nascent space program. Her most remembered effort is the calculations that contributed to the February 1962 mission that made John Glenn the first American to orbit the globe.

The launch of Johnson's namesake capsule also coincides with the 59th anniversary of that mission.

The Associated Press notes that the Saturday launch at Wallops Island is about 100 miles from NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., where Johnson and other Black female mathematicians profiled in the film worked.

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