SpaceX rocketship launches 4 astronauts on NASA mission to space station
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[April 23, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -NASA and Elon Musk's commercial
rocket company SpaceX launched a new four-astronaut team on a flight to
the International Space Station on Friday, the first crew ever propelled
into orbit by a rocket booster recycled from a previous spaceflight.
The company's Crew Dragon capsule, Endeavour, streaked into the darkened
pre-dawn sky atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket as its nine Merlin engines
roared to life at 5:49 a.m. (0949 GMT) from NASA's Kennedy Space Center
at Cape Canaveral, Florida. The blastoff was aired live on NASA TV.
The crew is due to arrive at the space station, which orbits some 250
miles (400 km) above Earth, early on Saturday following a flight of
about 23 hours.
Within 10 minutes of launch, the rocket's second stage had delivered the
crew capsule to Earth orbit, traveling at nearly 17,000 miles per hour,
according to launch commentators.
The rocket's first stage, meanwhile, descended back to Earth and touched
down safely on a landing platform floating in the Atlantic on a drone
ship affectionately named Of Course I Still Love You.
The mission marks the second "operational" space station team to be
launched by NASA aboard a Dragon Crew capsule since the United States
resumed flying astronauts into space from U.S. soil last year, following
a nine-year hiatus at the end of the U.S. space shuttle program in 2011.
It is also the third crewed flight launched into orbit under NASA's
fledgling public-private partnership with SpaceX, the rocket company
founded and owned by Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur who is also CEO
of electric carmarker Tesla Inc.
The first was an out-and-back test mission carrying just two astronauts
into orbit last May, followed by SpaceX's first full-fledged four-member
crew in November.
Friday's Crew 2 team consists of two NASA astronauts - mission commander
Shane Kimbrough, 53, and pilot Megan McArthur, 49 - along with Japanese
astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, 52, and fellow mission specialist Thomas
Pesquet, 43, a French engineer from the European Space Agency.
The four helmeted crew members, dressed in their white flight suits and
black boots, were briefly glimpsed seated side by side in the capsule
just after reaching orbit in a video clip captured by an onboard camera.
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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, with the Crew Dragon capsule, is launched
carrying four astronauts on a NASA commercial crew mission to the
International Space Station at Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida, U.S., April 23, 2021. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
LONG-DURATION MISSION
They are expected to spend about six months aboard the orbiting
research platform conducting science experiments and maintenance
before returning to Earth.
The four members of Crew 1, sent to the space station in November,
are slated to fly home on April 28.
The Crew 2 mission made a bit of spaceflight history due to the fact
that its Falcon 9 rocket blasted off with the same first-stage
booster that lofted Crew 1 into orbit five months ago, marking the
first time a previously flown booster has ever been re-used in a
crewed launch.
Reusable booster vehicles, designed to fly themselves back to Earth
and land safely once they separate from the rest of the rocket
minutes after launch, are at the heart of a re-usable rocket
strategy that SpaceX helped pioneer to make spaceflight more
economical.
SpaceX has logged dozens of successful Falcon 9 booster return
landings, and the company has refurbished and re-used most of them,
some for multiple flights. But all of those flights, until Friday's
mission, only carried cargo.
Crew 2's pilot, McArthur, made a bit of history herself as the first
female pilot of the Crew Dragon and the second person from her
family to ride aboard the SpaceX capsule. She is married to NASA
astronaut Bob Behnken, who flew the SpaceX demonstration flight with
fellow astronaut Doug Hurley last year. The same Crew Dragon was
used for that flight as well.
If all goes well, McArthur and her three crewmates will be welcomed
aboard the space station Saturday by the four Crew 1 astronauts -
three from NASA and one from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
JAXA. Two Russian cosmonauts and a U.S. astronaut who shared a Soyuz
flight to the space station are also aboard.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore, Nick Macfie, William Maclean)
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