SpaceX capsule designed to carry humans lifts off to ISS
It’s been 17 years, we still haven’t launched anyone yet, but hopefully we will later this year
Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX
CAPE CANAVERAL — SpaceX cele- brated the successful launch on Saturday of a new astronaut capsule on a week-long round trip to the International Space Station (ISS) — a key step towards resuming manned space flights from US soil after an eight-year break.
This time around, the only occupant on board SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule was a dummy named Ripley — but Nasa plans to put two astronauts aboard in July, although that date could be delayed.
The new capsule blasted off aboard the Falcon 9 rocket built by SpaceX — run by billionaire Elon Musk — at 2:49am (0749 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Canaveral, Florida, lighting up the coastline.
The first and second stages separated without incident, placing Dragon in Earth’s orbit 11 minutes after take-off.
Every successful stage of the mission — whose planning suffered three-year delays — triggered cheers at the firm’s headquarters and at the Kennedy Space Centre.
“I’m a little emotionally exhausted, because that was super stressful but it worked, so far,” Musk told a late-night press conference an hour later. “It’s been 17 years, we still haven’t launched anyone yet, but hopefully we will later this year.” The next tricky step for the capsule will be docking at the ISS on Sunday at around 1100 GMT, with a return to Earth scheduled for next Friday.
It is to splash down in the Atlantic Ocean, and then return to Cape Canaveral.
The mission aims to test the vessel’s reliability and safety in reallife conditions.
Ripley — nicknamed in honor of the character played by Sigourney Weaver in the “Alien” movies — is fitted with monitors to test the forces that future astronauts will be subjected to on takeoff and when they return to the Earth’s atmosphere and then land in the Atlantic, braked by giant parachutes.
The mission’s successful start provided some immediate reassurance. At the press conference, Musk asked the two Nasa astro-
nauts slated to fly in Dragon: “You guys think it’s a good vehicle?”
They both nodded. “Seeing a success like this, that really gives us a lot confidence in the future,”
said one of them, Bob Behnken.
In another success, the rocket’s first stage returned to Earth, landing on a platform 500 kilometres off the Florida coast. —