The Oklahoman

Astronauts head to launch site for SpaceX's 2nd crew flight

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Four astronauts headed to Kennedy Space Center on Sunday f or SpaceX's second crew launch, coming up next weekend.

For NASA, it marks the long-awaited start of regular crew rotations at the Internatio­nal Space Station, with private companies providing the lifts. There will be double the number of astronauts as the test flight earlier this year, and their mission will last a full six months.

The crew of three American san done Japanese are scheduled to rocket away Saturday night. It will be a speedy trip to the space station, a six-orbit express lasting under nine hours.

The astronauts have named their Dragon capsule Resilience given all the challenges of 2020: coronaviru­s and social isolation, civil unrest and a particular­ly difficult election and campaign season. They have been in quarantine for a week and taking safety precaution­s — masks and social distancing — long before that.

The four will remain in orbit until spring, when their replacemen­ts arrive aboard another SpaceX Dragon capsule. The cargo version of the capsule also will keep making regular deliveries of food and supplies.

SpaceX's Benji Reed said the company expects to launch seven Dragons over the next 14 months: three for crew and four for cargo.

“Every time there' s a Dragon launch, there will be two Dragons in space ,” said Reed, director of crew mission management.

NASA's other hired taxi service, meanwhile, Boeing, isn't expected to fly its first crew until next summer. The company plans a second unpiloted test flight in a couple months; the first one suffered so many software problems that the Starliner capsule failed to reach the space station.

NASA turned to private companies for space station deliveries — cargo, then crew— following the shuttle fleet' s retirement in 2011. U.S. astronauts kept hitching rides on Russian rockets at increasing­ly steep prices. The last Soyuz ticket cost NASA $90 million.

SpaceX finally ended NASA's nearly decadelong launch drought for astronauts last May, successful­ly delivering a pair of test pilots to the space station from Kennedy for a two-month stay. The returning capsule was scrutinize­d by SpaceX following its splashdown, resulting in a few changes for this second flight.

Engineers discovered excessive erosion in the heat shield from the searing reentry temperatur­es; the company shored up t he vulnerable section for the upcoming launch, said Space X' s Hans Koenig sm ann, a vice president. Improvemen­ts also were made to the altitude-measuring system for the parachutes, after the chutes opened a little too low on the first astronaut flight. More recently, the Falcon rocket had two engines replaced because of contaminat­ion from a red lacquer used in processing. The engine swaps delayed the flight two weeks.

Perhaps the biggest surprise from the first SpaceX crew flight was all the private boats full of gawkers who surrounded the capsule in the Gulf of Mexico following splashdown in August. Koenigsman­n promises a bigger keep-out zone and more patrols for future returns.

The second crew has three veteran fliers and one first-timer:

• Commander Mike Hopkins ,51, is an Air Force colonel and former space station resident who grew up on a hog and cattle farm in Missouri.

• Navy Cmdr. Victor Glover, 44, is the pilot and the lone space rookie; he's from the Los Angeles area and will be the first African-American astronaut to move into the space station for a long stay.

• Shannon Walker, 55, a Houston- born- andraised physicist, also has lived before on the space station; her husband, retired astronaut Andrew Thomas, helped build the outpost.

• The Japanese Space Agency's Soichi Noguchi, 55, another former station resident, will become the first person in decades to launch on three kinds of rocketship­s; he's already fl own on a U.S. space shuttle and Russian Soyuz.

They will join two Russian san done American who arrived at the space station last month from Kazakhstan.

Hopkins and his crew will ride to the launch pad in Teslas — Space X founder El on Musk's other company —in spacesuits colorcoord­inated with the spacecraft. But beneath all the good looks is “lots of amazing capability,” according to Glover.

“It's a very sleek capsule. But it' s got the advantage of having great leaps in technology since the last time we built spacecraft herein this country,” Walker said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

Noguchi, who along with Walker joined the crew just this year, is particular­ly excited about riding a Dragon. In Japan, the dragon is an esteemed mythical creature — “almost a ride to the heaven.”

“It's quite a privilege to learn how to train the Dragon actually, how to ride a Dragon,” he said. “SpaceX did pretty good job teaching from scratch to dragon rider in six months.”

 ??  ?? A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex 40 on Thursday at Cape Canaveral, Fla. [CRAIG BAILEY/FLORIDA TODAY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Launch Complex 40 on Thursday at Cape Canaveral, Fla. [CRAIG BAILEY/FLORIDA TODAY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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