Excitement Builds for Boeing's 1st Starliner Test Launch
Friday
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The debut test flight of a Boeing
Starliner astronaut taxi for NASA is ready to fly, with great weather expected
for its launch to the International Space Station Friday (Dec. 20).
A
United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket will launch the uncrewed CST-100 Starliner
spacecraft from Space Launch Compex 41 here at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
just before sunrise on Friday. Liftoff is set for 6:36 a.m. EST (1136
GMT).
"It's just incredibly proud and humbling to be here this week. It's
really a culmination of years of really hard work by integrated NASA, Boeing and
ULA teams," John Mulholland, vice president and program manager of Boeing's
Commercial Crew program, said in a prelaunch news conference at NASA's Kennedy
Space Center in Florida today (Dec. 17). "This is really setting up to be a
really incredible week."
An Atlas V rocket carrying Boeing's first
Starliner spacecraft rolls out to the launchpad at Space Launch Complex 41 of
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on Dec. 11, 2019. The mission will
launch on Dec. 20, 2019.
Starliner's upcoming flight, called the
Orbital Flight Test, will launch an anthropomorphic test dummy named Rosie
(named after the World War II icon Rosie the Riveter) amid 595 lbs. (270
kilograms) of cargo to the station, including radiation monitoring equipment,
clothing, food and holiday presents to the station. The spacecraft will dock at
the orbiting lab, then return to Earth around Dec. 28. The weeklong mission
should serve as a shakedown cruise for future crewed flights of Starliner
capsules for NASA.
Boeing is one of two commercial companies (SpaceX is
the other) with multi-billion-dollar contracts to fly astronauts to and from the
International Space Station on commercial spaceships. NASA picked the two
companies to be its commercial crew providers in 2014 to relieve the U.S.
agency's dependence on Russia's Soyuz spacecraft to fly Americans into soace.
The U.S. has relied on Soyuz vehicles since NASA's space shuttle fleet retired
in 2011.
"I am really looking forward to the maiden voyage of the Boeing
Starliner this Friday," Kathy Lueders, manager of NASA's Commercial Crew
program, said at the news conference.
Lueders described the uncrewed
mission as "a gift, they [uncrewed flights like this] give us the opportunity to
really see how the integrated system works through all the phases of flights,
but also, more importantly, it helps us as a joint team. How we're gonna work
together and get ourselves ready for our crewed mission coming up."
While strong winds and chilly weather might be blowing around in Florida
this week, current predictions suggest that there is an 80% chance that the
weather will be suitable for a safe liftoff.
"All l things
considered,things are looking fairly good for the week's end," Will Ulrich,
launch weather officer with the 45th Weather Squadron at Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station. " If the launch is delayed, however, Boeing can make another
launch attempt on on Saturday (Dec. 21) and Monday (Dec. 23), if needed.
This mission will be a critical test in anticipation of Boeing Crew
Flight Test (CFT), which will be the first crewed mission for Starliner.
Following its Friday launch, Starliner is scheduled to dock early on
Saturday at about 8:27 EST (1327 GMT)). After about a week up in space, the
craft will make a quick trip home on Dec. 28, with undocking to landing taking
just a little over four hours, Boeing representatives said.
"We are
actually tracking no spacecraft anomalies ... the spacecraft is in really good
shape," Mulholland said. "We're Looking forward to a really short, quick and
successful mission."
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