The Sun (Malaysia)

SpaceX launches latest crew to space station

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WASHINGTON: Days after a SpaceX Dragon capsule crewed by wealthy adventurer­s splashed down off Florida’s coast, another was launched yesterday, this time for a Nasa mission to the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS).

The Crew-4 mission blasted off from the Kennedy Space Centre at 3.52am (3.52pm in Malaysia), carrying Americans Kjell Lindgren, Bob Hines and Jessica Watkins, as well as Italian Samantha Cristofore­tti of the European Space Agency.

The event was livestream­ed on Nasa’s website and social media.

The rapid turnaround time for SpaceX – a little under 40 hours between recovering one crew and sending up another – is a sign of an increasing­ly busy human spacefligh­t calendar since Elon Musk’s company became Nasa’s mainstay astronaut taxi in 2020.

Between 2011 – when the Space Shuttle programme ended – and 2020, Nasa was reliant on Russian Soyuz rockets for the service.

“Think how the Cape has transforme­d, think about all of those abandoned launchpads on the Cape, and how they are roaring back to life,” Nasa Administra­tor Bill Nelson said.

Crew-4 will join the Crew-3 quartet, who are approachin­g the end of their five-month rotation on the ISS, as well as three Russians on the Russian segment of the orbital outpost.

A date for Crew-3’s return will be set soon.

Crew-4 is due to carry out hundreds of scientific experiment­s, including ongoing research into growing plants without soil in space.

Another involves developing an artificial human retina, leveraging the microgravi­ty environmen­t of the ISS to help deposit layer after layer of thin films of protein.

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