Filled with about six tonnes of garbage and waste produced on board the ISS, the Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) met its fiery end over an uninhabited zone of the southern Pacific Ocean at 1204 GMT, it said in a statement.
Dubbed Albert Einstein, the lifeline craft had detached from the ISS on Monday, then hovered at a safe distance until today, when its engines were fired to send the vessel back towards Earth for a planned, complete disintegration.
Europe's fourth ATV to service the ISS was rocketed into space from Europe's spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on June 5 and docked 10 days later.
The size of a double-decker bus, it ferried a record cargo of about seven tonnes to the ISS -- food, fuel, water, oxygen, science experiments and special treats for the orbiting crew.
At nearly 20.2 tonnes, ESA's penultimate cargo delivery to the ISS was the heaviest payload ever launched by an Ariane rocket. It also left the station with the largest-ever amount of waste, said an ESA statement.
One of its key functions was to boost the ISS, constantly falling towards Earth due to atmospheric resistance, back into a higher orbit.
The Albert Einstein followed the hi-tech trail of three others since 2008 that also carried the names of science gurus, the Jules Verne, the Johannes Kepler and the Edoardo Amaldi.
It will be followed next year by the last in ESA's ATV series, the George Lamaitre named for the father of the Big Bang theory of the Universe's creation.
"ATV Georges Lemaitre, has already arrived by boat at the European spaceport in French Guiana," said the agency.
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