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US MILITARY’S MYSTERY SPACE PLANE ROCKETS BACK INTO ORBIT

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The U.S. military’s mystery space plane rocketed into orbit again Sunday, this time with an extra load of science experiment­s.

It’s the sixth flight of an X-37B, a solar-powered plane that’s flown by remote control without a crew.

Officials aren’t saying how long the spacecraft will remain in orbit this time or the purpose of the mission. But a senior vice president for X-37B developer Boeing, Jim Chilton, noted each mission has been progressiv­ely longer.

The previous mission lasted a record two years, with a touchdown shrouded in darkness at NASA’S Kennedy Space Center last year.

The winged spacecraft resembles NASA’S old shuttles, but is just one-quarter the size at 29 feet (9 meters) long. The one just launched

features an extra compartmen­t for experiment­s, including several for NASA and the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, making it the biggest science load yet for an X-37B.

The Air Force has two of these reusable space planes. Their home base is a former space shuttle hangar at Kennedy.

“You could say that the X-37B stands on the shoulders of the space shuttle,” Chilton said. “From a common shape to a common home.” Since the first flight in 2010, the secretive space planes had logged a combined 2,865 days in orbit.

“If you add up all the missions, just under eight years in orbit and 1 billion miles, so a lot of traveling by this machine,” Chilton said during the launch broadcast.

Delayed a day by bad weather, this marked just the second rocket launch for the newly establishe­d Space Force. In March, it hoisted a national security satellite.

United Launch Alliance, which provided the Atlas V rocket, declared success 1 1/2 hours after liftoff. It dedicated Sunday’s launch to the health care workers and others who are working on the front lines of the pandemic.

The company said it followed health advice for the launch. Many of the flight controller­s wore masks and were spread out.

Precaution­s were less evident along area causeways, where spectators parked to watch the Atlas soar. Thick, low clouds spoiled the show.

The Cape Canaveral Air Force Station has an exceptiona­lly fast turnaround for its next launch.

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