Eat-drink
International Space Station receives cargo of world’s best whisky — all in the name of research
This photo taken on May 13, 2014 shows a worker standing next to casks of whisky at a storehouse of Suntory Liquorsu00e2u20acu2122 Hakushu distillery in Hokuto City, Yamanashi prefecture. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

TOKYO, Aug 25 — An unmanned cargo ship loaded with emergency supplies — including Japanese whisky — successfully docked at the International Space Station early today, officials said.

But thirsty astronauts will have to keep their hands off the golden tipple — it’s a science experiment.

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Drinks giant Suntory sent the booze to space so it could test how time in a zero-gravity environment affects its flavour.

Researchers for the company have said that storing the beverage in an environment with only slight temperature changes and limited liquid movement could lead to a mellower flavour.

The unusual cargo was placed inside the 5.5-tonne vessel “Kounotori” (stork in Japanese), which blasted off from southern Japan last Wednesday attached to an H-IIB rocket.

It was also loaded with food, water, clothing and tools necessary for experiments in space.

Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui, 45, who is living at the ISS, used a robotic arm to grab the vessel before it was successfully berthed at the station.

The cargo ship will leave the ISS and re-enter the earth’s atmosphere in late September, according to the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

The delivery also contained parts for a water recycling system, after the US-based National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) asked its Japanese counterparts to include them as “emergency materials” following the failure in June to launch the US Falcon 9 rocket.

The unmanned SpaceX rocket exploded minutes after lift-off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, marking a major setback for the company headed by technology tycoon Elon Musk.

The accident was the third in less than a year involving US and Russian supply ships bound for the International Space Station, and raised new concerns about the flow of food and gear to the astronauts living in orbit. — AFP

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