The Capital

Hope and glory overshadow strife

More big moments are on tap for 2021

- By Marcia Dunn programs was increased.”

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Astronauts blasted into orbit from the U.S. for the first time in nearly a decade, three countries sent spacecraft hurtling toward Mars, and robotic explorers grabbed rocks from the moon and gravel from an asteroid for return to Earth.

Space provided moments of hope and glory in an otherwise difficult, stressful year.

It promises to do the same in 2021, with February’s landings at Mars and next fall’s planned launch of the Hubble Space Telescope’s successor — the next-generation James Webb Space Telescope.

Boeing hopes to catch up with SpaceX in the astronaut-launching department, while space tourism may finally get off the ground.

“2021 promises to be as muchof a space exploratio­n bright spot, perhaps even more,” said Scott Hubbard, NASA’s former “Mars Czar” now teaching at Stanford University.

Although the coronaviru­s pandemic complicate­d space operations around the globe in 2020, most high- priority missions remained on track, led by the U.S., China and the United Arab Emirates in a stampede to Mars in July.

The UAE’s first interplane­tary spacecraft, an orbiter, will scrutinize the Martian atmosphere. NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover is set to land Feb. 18 at an ancient river delta and lakebed where microscopi­c life may have once flourished. The rover will drill into the dry crust, collecting samples for eventual return to Earth.

China’s orbiter-rover duo Tianwen-1— quest for heavenly truth — also will hunt

for signs of bygone life.

The European and Russian space agencies skipped the 2020 Mars launch window, their life- sniffing Mars rover grounded until 2022 because of technical issues and COVID-19 restrictio­ns.

China also set its sights on the moon in 2020, landing and then launching off the lunar surface in December with the first moon rocks collected for return to Earth since the 1970s.

Japan brought back pieces of asteroid Ryugu — its second asteroid batch in a decade. More asteroid samples are on the way: NASA’s Osiris-Rex spacecraft vacuumed up handfuls of gravel from asteroid Bennuin October for return in 2023.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX, meanwhile, was buzzing in 2020. In May, it became the

first private company to put people into orbit, an achievemen­t previously claimed by just three global superpower­s. The two test pilots were the first NASA astronauts to fly a new brand of spaceship in almost 40 years and the first to blast off from Florida since the shuttle program ended in 2011.

In November, four more astronauts rode a SpaceX Dragon capsule to the Internatio­nal Space Station. Three weeks later, SpaceX launched its biggest cargo shipment yet to the space station for NASA.

“This is an impressive achievemen­t which Americans should be proud of,” astronaut- turned- senator Mark Kelly said of the Dragon capsule doublehead­er.

Until the SpaceX flights, Russia’s three-person Soyuz capsules were the only way to get astronauts to the space station once NASA’ s shuttles shut down.

NASA’s other hired crew transporte­r, Boeing, is scrambling to get its Starliner capsule back in action after a software-spoiled test flight in December 2019. The do- over — again with no one on board — is targeted for spring. If the repairs work and the capsule finally reaches the space station, the first Star liner astronauts could be flying by summer.

Musk capped the year with a stratosphe­ric test flight of Starship, the rocketship he’s building to carry people to the moon and

Mars. The Dec. 9 demo went better than anyone imagined until a fiery explosion at touchdown. At the same time, SpaceX is expanding its Dragon-riding clientele. Late next year, SpaceX expects to launch the first privately financed Dragon flight in a deal arranged by Houston-based Axiom Space.

Axiom’ s Michael LopezAlegr­ia, an ex-NASA astronaut and former president of the Commercial Spacefligh­t Federation, will accompany Israeli businessma­n Eytan Stibbe and two other paying customers to the space station. Stibbe, a former fighter pilot, was a close friend of Israel’s first astronaut, Ilan Ramon, who died aboard space shuttle Columbia in 2003.

Will Tom Cruise be joining them? The actor was in talks with NASA this year about filming amovie at the space station.

“This is the true beginning of private spacefligh­t and will get the ball rolling toward multiple private missions to orbit per year,” Lopez-Alegria said in an email. “I’ve been preaching for almost a decade — that commercial human spacefligh­t is the next giant leap.”

Two other space-travel companies — Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic — are still conducting test flights and have yet to set firm dates for launching customers on short flights to the edge of space and back.

NASA is still targeting a November debut of its new moon rocket, the Space Launch System, with an Orion capsule that will launch without a crew. The Trump administra­tion had set a 2024 deadline for the first moon landing by astronauts since NASA’s Apollo program a half- century ago. Just this month, NASA introduced the 18 astronauts who will train for the moon program named for Artemis, the mythologic­al twin sister of Apollo.

It remains to be seen how President-elect Joe Biden might alter the lunar-landing program.

“Whatever else can be said about the four years of the Trump administra­tion, they have been positive for the U.S. civilian space program,” noted John Logsdon, professor emeritus at George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute. “No prior major programs were cancelled, the human exploratio­n program was given clear direction, and funding for existing

“I’ve been preaching for almost a decade — that commercial human spacefligh­t is the next giant leap.” — Michael Lopez-Alegria, an ex-NASA astronaut now with Houston-based Axiom Space

 ??  ?? ASpaceXFal­con9, withNASAas­tronauts in theDragon crewcapsul­e, lifts offfromthe­KennedySpa­ceCenter inCape Canaveral, Florida, inMay. Itwas the first time innearly a decade astronauts blasted offfromAme­ricansoil.JOHNRAOUX/
ASpaceXFal­con9, withNASAas­tronauts in theDragon crewcapsul­e, lifts offfromthe­KennedySpa­ceCenter inCape Canaveral, Florida, inMay. Itwas the first time innearly a decade astronauts blasted offfromAme­ricansoil.JOHNRAOUX/

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