The COTS demonstration mission was successfully conducted in September 2013, and Orbital commenced operational ISS cargo missions under the Commercial Resupply Service (CRS) program with two missions in 2014. Regrettably, the third operational mission,
Cygnus CRS Orb-3, resulted was not successful due to spectacular
Antares failure during launch. The company decided to discontinue the Antares 100 series and accelerate the introduction of a new propulsion. The Antares system was upgraded with newly built
RD-181 first-stage engines to provide greater payload performance and increased reliability. In the meantime, the company had contracted with
United Launch Alliance for an
Atlas V launch of
Cygnus CRS OA-4 in late 2015 from
Cape Canaveral,
Florida, with a second Atlas V Cygnus launch in 2016. The company had planned Cygnus missions for the first (
CRS OA-5), second (
CRS OA-6) and fourth quarters (
CRS OA-7) of 2016. Two of which flew on the new
Antares 230 and one on the aforementioned second Atlas V. These three missions enabled Orbital ATK to cover their initial CRS contracted payload obligation. This particular mission, known as NG-10, is part of an extension program that will enable NASA to cover the ISS resupply needs until the
Commercial Resupply Services 2 contract enters in effect, and thus the E indicates that it actually is an extension above the originally contracted payload transport. Production and integration of Cygnus spacecraft is performed in Dulles, Virginia. The Cygnus service module is mated with the pressurized cargo module at the launch site, and mission operations are conducted from control centers in
Dulles, Virginia and
Houston,
Texas. == Spacecraft ==