Dragon Preps, Artificial Intelligence, and Medical Gear Fill Crew’s Day

Dragon Preps, Artificial Intelligence, and Medical Gear Fill Crew’s Day

Dragon Preps, Artificial Intelligence, and Medical Gear Fill Crew’s Day

https://www.nasa.gov/blogs/spacestation/2026/02/05/dragon-preps-artificial-intelligence-and-medical-gear-fill-crews-day/

Publish Date: 2026-02-05 14:59:00

Source Domain: www.nasa.gov

SpaceX Dragon arrival preparations and artificial intelligence research to improve crew operations continued aboard the International Space Station on Thursday. The Expedition 74 crew also checked out new medical hardware and trained to use emergency gear while keeping up orbital lab maintenance.

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-12 mission continues its countdown to a launch targeted for no earlier than 6:01 a.m. EST on Feb. 11, from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The four Crew-12 members Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway, both from NASA, Sophie Adenot of ESA (European Space Agency), and Andrey Fedyaev of Roscosmos will dock to the orbital outpost’s space-facing port on the Harmony module the following day. They will spend nine months conducting advanced microgravity research aboard the orbital outpost benefitting humans living on and off the Earth.

Station Flight Engineer Chris Williams kept up his Dragon training and station configurations ahead of Crew-12’s planned arrival next week. Williams spent an hour continuing to review the procedures he will use while monitoring Dragon’s automated approach and rendezvous toward Harmony. Afterward, he began gathering and organizing standard spacecraft emergency hardware that will be transferred into Dragon shortly after it arrives.

Williams also checked out the new Ultrasound 3 biomedical device that is replacing the Ultrasound 2 scanner on the station. He powered on the device in the Columbus laboratory module and tested its configurations and electrical connections with a laptop computer and the Human Research Facility. The Ultrasound 3 was delivered to the orbital outpost on Sept. 18, 2025, aboard Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus XL spacecraft. It can be used for advanced imaging of a crew member’s cardiovascular, abdominal, and musculoskeletal systems in weightlessness with real-time guidance from doctors on the ground.

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