THISDAY

Unmanned U.S. Air Force Space Plane Lands after Secret, Two-year Mission

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The U. S. military’s experiment­al X- 37B space plane landed on Sunday at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, completing a classified mission that lasted nearly two years, the Air Force said.

The unmanned X- 37B, which resembles a miniature space shuttle, touched down at 7: 47 a. m. EDT ( 1147 GMT) on a runway formerly used for landings of the now- mothballed space shuttles, the Air Force said in an email.

The Boeing- built space plane blasted off in May 2015 from nearby Cape Canaveral Air Force Station aboard an Atlas 5 rocket built by United Launch Alliance, a partnershi­p between Lockheed Martin Corp ( LMT. N) and Boeing Co ( BA. N).

The X- 37B, one of two in the Air Force fleet, conducted unspecifie­d experiment­s for more than 700 days while in orbit. It was the fourth and lengthiest mission so far for the secretive program, managed by the Air Force Rapid Capabiliti­es Office.

The orbiters “perform risk reduction, experiment­ation and concept- of- operations developmen­t for reusable space vehicle technologi­es,” the Air Force has said without providing details. The cost of the program is also classified.

The Secure World Foundation, a nonprofit group promoting the peaceful exploratio­n of space, says the secrecy surroundin­g the X- 37B suggests the presence of intelligen­ce-related hardware being tested or evaluated aboard the craft.

The vehicles are 29 feet ( 9 meters) long and have a wingspan of 15 feet, making them about one quarter of the size of the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion’s now-retired space shuttles.

The X-37B, also known as Orbital Test Vehicle, or OTV, first flew in April 2010 and returned after eight months. A second mission launched in March 2011 and lasted 15 months, while a third took flight in December 2012 and returned after 22 months.

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