Dayton Daily News

Astronauts chosen for SpaceX, Boeing capsule flights in 2019

Nine named to ride SpaceX’s Dragon, Boeing’s Starliner.

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPECANAVE­RAL,FLA.— NASA assigned the astronauts who will ride the first commercial capsules into orbit next year and bring crew launches back to the U.S.

SpaceX and Boeing are shooting for a test flight of their capsules by the end of this year or early next, with the first crews flying from Cape Canaveral, Florida, by next spring or summer.

Nine astronauts were named to ride the SpaceX Dragon and Boeing Starliner capsules — five on the first crew flights and four on the second round of missions to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

“For the first time since 2011, we are on the brink of launching American astronauts on American rockets from American soil,” said NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e, who made Friday’s introducti­ons at Johnson Space Center.

U.S. astronauts now take Russian capsules to the space station, with NASA paying as much as $82 million a seat.

Boeing’s first Starliner crew will include a former NASA astronaut who commanded the last shuttle flight in 2011, Chris Ferguson, who’s now a Boeing employee.

The other commercial crew members are still with NASA. All have a military background.

The seven men and two women pumped their fists in the air and gave thumbs-up as they strode onto the stage to cheers from the crowd.

“As a test pilot, it doesn’t get any better than this,” said astronaut Nicole Aunapu Mann, a naval aviator who will make her first trip into space on the first Starliner crew.

She later said the energy in the packed auditorium was incredible.

“We’re ushering in this new era of American spacefligh­t. I really think it’s just the beginning,” Mann told The Associated Press.

NASA has been paying billions of dollars to SpaceX and Boeing to develop the crew capsules to pick up where the shuttles left off, while also paying billions for cargo deliveries to the space station by SpaceX and Northrop Grumman.

The cargo missions started in 2012. The crew missions have been delayed repeatedly because of the technical challenges and difficulti­es of making spacecraft safe for humans. A recent abort test by Boeing resulted in leaking engine fuel.

Astronaut Doug Hurley, who will be on the first crew of the SpaceX Dragon, hinted at the delays when he noted, “The first flight is something you dream about as a test pilot, and you don’t think it’s ever going to happen to you. But looks like it might.”

“Oh, it better,” Bridenstin­e chimed in.

Besides Ferguson and Mann, the initial commercial crew members are Eric Boe, Sunita Williams and John Cassada riding on Boeing.

Robert Behnken, Douglas Hurley, Victor Glover and Michael Hopkins will fly with SpaceX.

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell took a photo of the astronauts before assuring them, “We won’t let you down.”

Boeing’s Starliners will soar on United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V rockets. Dragons, meanwhile, will fly on SpaceX’s own Falcon 9 rockets. The race to get astronauts to the space station first is real; a U.S. flag that flew on the first space shuttle flight in 1981 and the last shuttle flight in 2011 awaits the winner.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Victor Glover (from left), Michael Hopkins, Robert Behnken, Douglas Hurley, Nicole Mann, Christophe­r Ferguson, Eric Boe, Josh Cassada and Sunita Williams are announced in Houston on Friday by NASA as astronauts on Boeing and SpaceX capsules.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS Victor Glover (from left), Michael Hopkins, Robert Behnken, Douglas Hurley, Nicole Mann, Christophe­r Ferguson, Eric Boe, Josh Cassada and Sunita Williams are announced in Houston on Friday by NASA as astronauts on Boeing and SpaceX capsules.

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