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SpaceX Crew Dragon rolls out to pad
for Crew-1 astronaut launch for NASA
Resilience and its Falcon 9 rocket just took another
step toward liftoff.
The
SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule that will carry four astronauts to the International
Space Station this weekend has made it to the launch pad.
The
capsule, named Resilience, and its SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket rolled out to Launch
Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida late Monday into early Tuesday
(Nov. 9-10), NASA officials said.
The
Falcon 9 is scheduled to launch Saturday evening (Nov. 14), sending four
astronauts
—
NASA's Victor Glover, Mike Hopkins and Shannon Walker and Japan's Soichi Noguchi
— to the orbiting lab on Crew-1, SpaceX's first operational astronaut mission
for NASA.
Some
important boxes need to be ticked before that can happen, however. Two of those
milestones will occur today (Nov. 10), if all goes according to plan — a "static
fire" of the Falcon 9, in which the rocket's engines blaze up while the booster
remains tethered to the ground, and completion of the Crew-1 flight readiness
review. (Update for 2:50 p.m. EST on Nov. 10: The flight readiness review is
done, and launch remains targeted for Nov. 14.)
NASA's
Commercial Crew Program awarded SpaceX a $2.6 billion contract in 2014 to fly at
least six operational crewed missions to the space station. The six-month-long
Crew-1 is the first of those contracted flights, but it won't be SpaceX's
first-ever astronaut mission. That distinction goes to Demo-2, a test flight
that sent NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the station for two
months this past summer.
A
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Crew Dragon spacecraft onboard is seen
on the launch pad at Launch Complex 39A on Nov. 10, 2020, after being rolled out
overnight as preparations continue for the Crew-1 mission at NASA’s Kennedy
Space Center in Florida.
Boeing
also got a NASA commercial crew deal in 2014, worth $4.2 billion. The aerospace
giant will fulfill the deal using a capsule called CST-100 Starliner, which
isn't ready to fly astronauts yet. Starliner must first ace an uncrewed test
flight to the orbiting lab, a mission that the capsule first tried in December
2019. That attempt failed after a glitch trapped Starliner in an orbit too low
to allow a meetup with the station.
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