Billionaire e-commerce mogul partners with SpaceX for 3 more crewed
flights
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[February 15, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The billionaire
e-commerce mogul who last year led the world's first all-private space
crew launched into orbit said on Monday he plans to help bankroll up to
three more such missions with SpaceX, independent of NASA's human
spaceflight program.
Jared Isaacman, founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments Inc, said his new
"Polaris" collaboration with fellow billionaire and SpaceX chief Elon
Musk could launch its first four-member crew as early as the fourth
quarter of this year.
Dubbed Polaris Dawn, the mission would aim to set a new orbital altitude
record and feature the world's first commercial spacewalk, while also
testing the laser-based communications system of SpaceX's Starlink
satellite network, Isaacman said in a message online.
If successful, the initiative would mark yet another milestone in the
growing commercialization of space, for which human exploration was long
the sole domain of professional astronauts.
As he did in the history-making "Inspiration4" flight that carried a
quartet of private citizens into orbit last September aboard a SpaceX
Crew Dragon capsule, Isaacman plans to serve as mission commander of the
Polaris Dawn mission.
A spokesman told Reuters that Isaacman and SpaceX "are investing in the
mission together" but not revealing any financial details.
Isaacman, an experienced jet pilot who flew in the Black Diamond
civilian aerobatics squadron and co-founded a private air force of
fighter planes for military training, introduced his three Polaris Dawn
crewmates on a conference call from Los Angeles on Monday.
Although none is a professional astronaut, all have close career ties to
the aerospace field.
The Polaris Dawn pilot is retired U.S. Air Force combat pilot Scott
Poteet, a former Shift4 executive and mission director for Inspiration4.
Rounding out the crew will be two lead space operations engineers from
SpaceX - Sarah Gillis, who oversees the company's astronaut training
program, and Anna Menon, who manages crew operations development. Both
have also served as SpaceX mission control operators.
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Jared Isaacman, founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments and flight
commander, climbs into a Tesla as the Inspiration 4 crew, the first
all-civilian crew to be sent into orbit, gather before dawning space
suits to head to the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Pad 39A at the
Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., September 15,
2021. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
Plans call for a SpaceX Falcon 9
rocket to launch the Polaris Dawn from Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida, and for the crew to spend up to five days in
orbit.
To achieve Isaacman's objective of reaching the highest altitude
ever in Earth orbit, Polaris would have to surpass the all-time
record 850 miles (1,368 km) set in 1966 by NASA's Gemini 11 mission.
The planned spacewalk, set for much lower orbit at about 310 miles
(500 km) over the Earth, would prove an especially challenging feat
as the first ever "extravehicular activity," or EVA, attempted by
non-professional astronauts.
A second Polaris mission would, like the first, make use of the
Falcon 9-Crew Dragon combo that has become the SpaceX workhorse for
numerous NASA missions.
But the third flight envisioned for the Polaris program would break
ground as the first human flight aboard Musk's next-generation
Starship, which SpaceX is developing for eventual missions to the
moon and Mars.
Undertaking the maiden crewed flight of a brand-new spacecraft
without seasoned professional astronauts would stray from
longstanding practice at SpaceX, which relied on NASA veterans to
fly its first human missions of the Falcon 9 and Crew Dragon.
Polaris is not the only commercial space outfit looking to send its
own crew to orbit in the near future.
SpaceX plans separately to launch a four-person private crew of the
Houston-based spaceflight company Axiom to the International Space
Station on March 30 for what would be the first all-private flight
to dock at the orbiting research laboratory. The debut Axiom crew
includes a retired NASA astronaut and a former Israeli fighter
pilot.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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