CRS

CRS may refer to:

Science and technology

  • Cambridge Reference Sequence, used in mitochondrial DNA testing
  • Canada Remote Systems, a now-defunct bulletin board system based in Toronto
  • Carrier Routing System, a large-scale core router
  • Caudal regression syndrome, a rare congenital disorder
  • Center for Resource Solutions, a renewable energy policy nonprofit
  • Clinical Research Society, is a registered, non-profit, independent membership organisation
  • Cold Rolled Slitter, see Roll Slitting
  • Cold Rolled Steel
  • Colorectal surgery, also known as proctology
  • Commercial Resupply Services, a NASA contract to deliver supplies to space
  • Congenital rubella syndrome, a disease passed from mother to fetus
  • Computer reservations system (or Central Reservation System), a computerised system used for travel bookings
  • Coordinate reference system, used to locate geographical entities
  • Cutaneous radiation syndrome, a syndrome that results from acute radiation exposure to the skin
  • Chinese restaurant syndrome, purportedly caused by the flavor enhancer glutamate
  • CRS-2

    CRS-2 may refer to:

  • SpaceX CRS-2 SpX-2, flight for SpaceX's uncrewed Dragon cargo spacecraft
  • Cygnus CRS Orb-2 CRS-2, flight for Orbital Sciences Cygnus cargo spacecraft
  • Commercial Resupply Services Phase 2 of NASA
  • List_of_heliports_in_Canada#188 Parry Sound Medical Heliport (CRS2)
  • SpaceX CRS-7

    SpaceX CRS-7 was a private American rocket cargo resupply mission to the International Space Station, contracted to NASA, which launched and failed on June 28, 2015. It disintegrated 139 seconds into the flight after launch from Cape Canaveral, just before the first stage was to separate from the second stage. It was the ninth flight for SpaceX's uncrewed Dragon cargo spacecraft and the seventh SpaceX operational mission contracted to NASA under a Commercial Resupply Services contract. The vehicle launched on a Falcon 9 v1.1 launch vehicle. It was the nineteenth overall flight for the Falcon 9 and the fourteenth flight for the substantially upgraded Falcon 9 v1.1.

    Launch history

    In January 2015, the launch was tentatively scheduled by NASA for no earlier than June 13, 2015. This was adjusted to June 22, 2015, then moved forward to June 19, 2015 and adjusted again to June 26, 2015. Subsequently, the launch had been rescheduled to June 28, 2015 at 14:21:11 UTC, from Cape Canaveral LC-40. The launch was scheduled to be the third controlled-descent and landing test for the Falcon 9's first stage. It would have attempted to land on a new autonomous drone ship named Of Course I Still Love You – named after a ship in the novel The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks. The spacecraft was planned to stay in orbit for five weeks before returning to Earth with approximately 1,400 pounds (640 kg) of supplies and waste.

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