NASA set to resume human spaceflight from U.S. soil with historic SpaceX
launch
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[May 27, 2020]
By Joey Roulette
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - SpaceX,
the private rocket company of billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, was
set to launch two Americans into orbit on Wednesday from Florida on a
mission that would mark the first spaceflight of NASA astronauts from
U.S. soil in nine years.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket was due to lift off from the Kennedy Space
Center at 4:33 p.m. EDT (2033 GMT), launching Doug Hurley and Bob
Behnken on a 19-hour ride aboard the company's newly designed Crew
Dragon capsule to the International Space Station.
They were to blast off from the same launch pad used by NASA's final
space shuttle flight, piloted by Hurley, in 2011. President Donald Trump
and Vice President Mike Pence were scheduled to visit Florida's Cape
Canaveral to view the launch in person.
Prospects for an on-time liftoff hinged on the weather, with forecasters
late on Monday citing a 40% chance that storms over eastern Florida
could force a postponement. If that happens, the next launch window
would be Saturday afternoon.
A successful mission would achieve NASA's top priority, as articulated
by agency chief Jim Bridenstine, of resuming launches of "American
astronauts on American rockets from American soil." Over the past nine
years, NASA astronauts have had to hitch rides into orbit aboard
Russia's Soyuz spacecraft.
For Musk, Thursday's launch represents another milestone for the
reusable rockets his company pioneered to make spaceflight less costly
and frequent. It would also mark the first time that commercially
developed space vehicles - owned and operated by a private entity rather
than NASA - have carried Americans into orbit.
The last time NASA launched astronauts into space aboard a brand new
vehicle was 40 years ago at the start of the shuttle program.
Musk, the South African-born high-tech entrepreneur who made his fortune
in Silicon Valley, is also the CEO of electric carmaker and battery
manufacturer Tesla Inc.
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Crews work on the SpaceX Crew Dragon, attached to a Falcon 9 booster
rocket, as it sits horizontal on Pad39A at the Kennedy Space Center
in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. May 26, 2020. REUTERS/Steve Nesius
Hurley, 53, and Behnken, 49, NASA employees under contract to fly
with SpaceX, are expected to remain at the space station for several
weeks, assisting a short-handed crew aboard the orbital laboratory.
Aerospace giant Boeing Co, producing its own space launch vehicles
in competition with SpaceX for NASA business, is expected to launch
its CST-100 Starliner vehicle with astronauts aboard for the first
time next year.
NASA has awarded nearly $8 billion to SpaceX and Boeing combined for
development of the rival space launch systems.
Bridenstine declared the manned SpaceX flight a "go" last week after
NASA and the company convened for final engineering checks.
The Hawthorne, California-based rocket company, founded by Musk in
2002 and formerly known as Space Exploration Technologies, has never
previously flown humans into orbit, only cargo.
SpaceX successfully tested Crew Dragon without astronauts last year
in its first orbital mission to the space station, but that vehicle
was destroyed the following month during a ground test when a valve
for its in-flight abort system failed, causing an explosion. The
ensuing nine-month investigation ended in January.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Cape Canaveral, Fla.; Writing by
Steve Gorman; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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