SpaceX launch: Four astronauts take off aboard Crew Dragon bound for ISS


A SpaceX spacecraft carrying four astronauts soared into outer space Sunday — marking the kick off of what NASA hopes will be years of the company helping to keep the International Space Station fully staffed.

NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker, and Soichi Noguchi, an astronaut
with Japan’s space agency, are now in orbit, riding aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule that is
expected to dock with the ISS on Monday at 11 pm ET. That means the crew will spend 27 hours in orbit
as the spacecraft slowly maneuvers toward its destination.
The trip would have been shorter if the Crew Dragon were able to launch on Saturday, as NASA first
planned, because the ISS would have lined up in such away as to allow the spacecraft to reach the
space station in about eight hours. But bad weather brought by Hurricane Eta forced launch officials to
delay takeoff to Sunday evening.
The capsule has a working restroom, and the astronauts will have time to get some sleep as the fully
autonomous vehicle maneuvers through orbit while SpaceX and NASA officials in Houston, Texas, and
Hawthorne, California,watch over the journey.
This is a landmark mission for NASA and the company because it is the first fully operational crewed
mission for SpaceX, following up a test mission in May that carried NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley
and Robert Behnken, both test pilots, to the space station.
But this mission is not a test: SpaceX’s Crew Dragon was officially certified as a spacecraft worthy of
carrying people last week, paving the way for it to begin making the trip relatively routine, carrying
astronauts from a variety of backgrounds.
On this mission, for example, both Walker and Noguchi have backgrounds in physics. The Crew-1 team
is slated to conduct all sorts of experiments during their six-month stay on the ISS, including research
into how microgravity affects human heart tissue. They’ll also attempt to grow radishes in space to build
on studies designed to figure out how food might be grown to sustain deep-space exploration missions.
Sunday’s mission had been briefly thrown into question after SpaceX CEO Elon Musk revealed on
Twitter that he was experiencing symptoms and was being tested for Covid-19, prompting NASA to carry
out a contact tracing effort to ensure no essential personnel for the launch might have been exposed.
Officials said that effort was completed by Friday night, and they had no cause for concern.
Musk said on Saturday that he “most likely” had a “moderate case of covid.”
The United States spent nearly a decade without the ability to launch astronauts into space after the
retirement of the Space Shuttle program in 2011, and NASA was forced to rely on Russian Soyuz
spacecraft to get astronauts to the ISS, which the space agency says left the multibillion-dollar orbiting
laboratory understaffedAs many as 13 astronauts were on board at one time in 2009. That number has
occasionally dropped to as low as three on several occasions, which leaves fewer people to help run
experiments and help keep the space station well maintained. With this launch, it will grow to seven.
SpaceX developed the Crew Dragon capsule under NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, which, for the
first time in the space agency’s history, handed over much of the design, development and testing of
new human-rated spacecraft to the private sector. NASA awarded SpaceX and Boeing fixed-price
contracts worth $2.6 billion and $4.2 billion, respectively, to get the job done. Development of Boeing’s
Starliner spacecraft is still delayed because of major software issuesdetected during a test mission last
year, but officials say that vehicle could be in operation next year.
Because these vehicles will technically be owned by SpaceX and Boeing, with NASA serving as a
customer that buys missions for astronauts, the companies will also be able to use their vehicles to fly
tourists, private researchers or anyone else who can afford a $50 million-plus ticket.
That decision wasn’t without controversy, particularly in the Commercial Crew Program’s early days. But
Crew Dragon’s success could be seen as a huge win for folks at NASA who hope to rely more
extensively on that contracting style to help accomplish the space agency’s goals.( CNN / IM )
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