'SpaceX, this is Resilience': Four astronauts begin six-month stay on
space station
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[November 17, 2020]
By Joey and Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Four astronauts
riding a newly-designed spacecraft from Elon Musk's rocket company
SpaceX greeted their new crewmates aboard the International Space
Station on Tuesday after successfully docking in a landmark achievement
for private space travel.
In NASA's first full-fledged mission ferrying a crew into orbit on a
privately-owned spacecraft, the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule dubbed
Resilience opened its hatch door shortly after 1 a.m. EST (0600 GMT),
two hours after docking and 27 hours after launching atop a Falcon 9
rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
"SpaceX, this is Resilience. Excellent job. Right down the center," Crew
Dragon commander Mike Hopkins said from the spacecraft after docking. "SpaceX
and NASA, congratulations, this is a new era of operational flights to
the International Space Station from the Florida coast."
A few minutes later, the crew of three Americans and one Japanese
astronaut emerged from the capsule and boarded the station, greeting the
existing crew of one U.S. astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts with hugs
and high-fives.
The space station, an orbital laboratory about 250 miles (400 km) above
Earth, will be their home for the next six months. After that, another
set of astronauts on a Crew Dragon capsule will replace them. That
rotation will continue until Boeing joins the program with its own
spacecraft late next year.
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The crew members of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, spacecraft commander
Mike Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker and Japanese astronaut
Soichi Noguchi, depart for the launch pad for the first operational
NASA commercial crew mission at Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida, U.S. November 15, 2020. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
NASA had been reliant on Russia's space program since 2011, when the
U.S. shuttle program ended.
Hopkins arrived with two fellow NASA astronauts, pilot Victor Glover
and physicist Shannon Walker, in addition to Japanese astronaut
Soichi Noguchi, making his third trip to space after previously
flying on the U.S. shuttle in 2005 and Soyuz in 2009.
"The last 27 hours have gone really smooth actually," Hopkins said
after boarding the space station. "We are looking forward to the
next six months, and can't wait to get started."
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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