Highlights From SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Astronaut Launch for NASA

‘One heck of a ride’: 4 astronauts lift off in a SpaceX capsule named Resilience.

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From left, Shannon Walker, Victor Glover, Mike Hopkins and Soichi Noguchi, the four astronauts who launched toward the space station on Sunday.Credit...Cj Gunther/EPA, via Shutterstock

SpaceX carried four astronauts to orbit on Sunday night, overcoming iffy weather and brief delays with the inner seal of a spacecraft hatch. After a trip of some 27.5 hours in orbit, the astronauts will dock with the International Space Station and begin a six month stay.

At 7:27 p.m. Eastern time, the nine engines of the private company’s Falcon 9 rocket roared to life and brightened the night sky as the rocket arced over the Atlantic Ocean.

The four astronauts on this flight are Michael S. Hopkins, Shannon Walker and Victor J. Glover of NASA, and Soichi Noguchi, a Japanese astronaut.

About an hour after launching, Colonel Hopkins, the mission’s commander, remarked on the beauty of the crew’s view of Earth from orbit, then thanked the staff at SpaceX that made the launch possible.

“That was one heck of a ride,” he said, adding that the astronauts were all smiles on the way up.

“Resilience is in orbit,” he added.

In the future, instead of relying on government-operated spacecraft, NASA astronauts and anyone else with enough money can buy a ticket on a commercial rocket.

NASA designated Sunday night’s launch as the first operational flight of the Crew Dragon spacecraft built and operated by SpaceX, the rocket company started by Elon Musk. The four astronauts aboard — three from NASA and one from JAXA, the Japanese space agency — left Earth from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

NASA and SpaceX last week completed the certification process, which provides the space agency’s seal of approval that SpaceX has met the specifications set out for regularly taking NASA astronauts to orbit. This launch, known as Crew-1, is a regularly scheduled trip to take four crew members for a six-month stay at the space station.

“It marks the end of the development phase of the system,” Phil McAlister, director of commercial spaceflight development at NASA, said in a telephone interview with reporters on Thursday. “For the first time in history, there is a commercial capability from a private sector entity to safely and reliably transport people to space.”

A live video stream from NASA showed the astronauts in good spirits in the suit-up room as they put on their modern SpaceX flight suits. As numerous SpaceX technicians in black uniforms and face masks assisted them, the astronauts smiled and took photos with visitors, including Jim Bridenstine, the administrator of NASA, and Gwynne Shotwell, the president and chief operations officer of SpaceX.

Just after 4 p.m., the astronauts got into Tesla cars with license plates that said “L8RERTH.” They said goodbye to their families and began a drive to the launchpad that took about 20 minutes.

This is the first of what NASA calls “operational” flights of the Crew Dragon. In May, there was a demonstration mission, with two NASA astronauts — Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley — aboard. That launch, in a capsule named Endeavour, was the first time that a crewed mission had lifted off from the United States to orbit since the retirement of NASA’s space shuttles in 2011. Its return was also the first water landing by astronauts aboard an American spacecraft since the Apollo capsules stopped flying in the 1970s.

NASA has been relying on Russian Soyuz rockets to get its astronauts to the space station. That has become increasingly expensive, rising to a cost of more than $90 million a seat.

Who are the astronauts?

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Astronauts Soichi Noguchi, left, Shannon Walker, Victor Glover and Mike Hopkins at Cape Canaveral before the launch. Credit...Joe Skipper/Reuters

There are four astronauts on Crew-1:

Michael S. Hopkins, 51, a colonel in the United States Space Force, is the commander for the flight. (Colonel Hopkins is also the first member of the newly created U.S. Space Force to go to space.) He was one of nine astronauts selected by NASA in 2009. He has made one previous trip to the International Space Station, in 2013 and 2014, spending 166 days in orbit.

Shannon Walker, 55, has had one previous stint on the space station, in 2010. Dr. Walker has a doctoral degree in space physics from Rice University, where she studied how the solar wind interacted with the atmosphere of Venus.

Soichi Noguchi, 55, an astronaut with JAXA, the Japanese space agency, will be making his third trip to space. He was a member of the crew of the space shuttle Discovery in 2005 on the first shuttle launch after the loss of Columbia and its seven astronauts more than two years earlier.

During that visit to the International Space Station, Mr. Noguchi made three spacewalks. That included one to test techniques developed to repair damage to the heat tiles on the shuttle similar to what had doomed Columbia when it re-entered Earth’s atmosphere. In 2009 and 2010, he spent five months in orbit as a member of the space station crew.

Victor Glover, 44, selected by NASA in 2013 to be an astronaut, will be making his first spaceflight. He will be the first Black NASA astronaut to be a member of a space station crew.

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Victor Glover will be the first Black crew member on the space station.

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Credit...Cj Gunther/EPA, via Shutterstock

In the 20-some years that people have been living aboard the International Space Station, its extended crew has never included a Black astronaut. Victor J. Glover, a Navy commander and test pilot who joined the astronaut corps in 2013, will be the first.

Since the International Space Station’s inception it has seen numerous other milestones: hosting the world’s first space tourist, having its first female commander and enduring the transition from U.S. astronauts being transported through NASA’s space shuttle program to using SpaceX’s spacecraft.

But Mr. Glover’s achievement is notable for NASA, which has worked to spotlight the “hidden figures” in its history, but has so far sent only 14 Black Americans to space out of a total of more than 300 NASA astronauts.

He will not be the first Black astronaut aboard the station. But those who preceded him from NASA were members of space shuttle crews during the station’s construction and only made brief stays on the outpost.

Mr. Glover and three other astronauts will launch on Sunday aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule named Resilience and are expected to spend about six months aboard the station.

Next year, he could be followed by Jeanette Epps, who would be the first Black woman to to be part of an I.S.S. crew. She will fly aboard the first operational crewed trip of Boeing’s Starliner capsule. (In 2018, she was pulled from a flight to the station and replaced with Serena Auñón-Chancellor.)

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The NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps.Credit...NASA

NASA first involved Black Americans in the astronaut program in the 1960s when Ed Dwight, an Air Force test pilot, became an astronaut candidate. But he never went to space. Guion S. Bluford Jr. became the first Black American in space in 1983 aboard the space shuttle Challenger; Mae Jemison was the first Black woman in 1992.

Sunday’s launch follows a summer of racial and social unrest in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd, a Black man, at the hands of the Minneapolis police. When asked during a news conference on Monday about his thoughts on making history, Mr. Glover modestly nodded to the significance.

“It is something to be celebrated once we accomplish it, and I am honored to be in this position and to be a part of this great and experienced crew,” he said. “And I look forward to getting up there and doing my best to make sure, you know, we are worthy of all the work that’s been put into setting us up for this mission. You know, unlike the election — that is in the past or receding in the past — this mission is still ahead of me. So, let’s get there, and I’ll talk to you after I get on board.”

During the summer, Mr. Glover responded to a question on social media about astronauts sticking strictly to space.

“Actually no,” he said on Twitter. “Remember who is doing space. People are. As we address extreme weather and pandemic disease, we will understand and overcome racism and bigotry so we can safely and together do space. Thanks for asking.”

He also said this week in an interview with The Christian Chronicle, a publication of the Churches of Christ, that the milestone was “bittersweet.”

“I’ve had some amazing colleagues before me that really could have done it, and there are some amazing folks that will go behind me,” Mr. Glover said. “I wish it would have already been done, but I try not to draw too much attention to it.”

Charles F. Bolden Jr., who served as NASA administrator under President Barack Obama, said that while Mr. Glover was making history, he should not feel burdened.

“Several of us have had an opportunity to try to talk with him regularly and try to help put him at ease and help him understand he’s not carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders,” said Mr. Bolden, who is also Black and spent almost 700 hours in space as a NASA astronaut. “He shouldn’t feel unusual responsibility because he’s Black. He should just go and be another crew member and have a good time.”

Mr. Glover is married to Dionna Odom, and they have four children.

Originally from Pomona, Calif., Mr. Glover graduated with a bachelor’s degree in general engineering from California Polytechnic State University in 1999. Over the course of 2007 to 2010, he earned three master’s degrees: in flight test engineering, systems engineering and military operational art and science.

Mr. Glover is often referred to by his counterparts as Ike, a nod to a call sign a former commanding officer gave him that stands for “I know everything.”

When will the astronauts arrive at the space station?

If the launch occurs as scheduled on Sunday, the Crew Dragon will dock at the International Space Station on Monday at about 11 p.m. Eastern time. You can follow its journey below:

The launch occurs when the orbit of the space station passes above the launchpad. However, it takes hours for the capsule to catch up with the space station, which is traveling at more than 17,000 miles per hour. Once the capsule gets near the station, its computer on board will complete a series of maneuvers to safely bring it in proximity to the outpost. Then it will carefully dock with one of the station’s ports that allow astronauts to enter.

Even after docking, it takes the astronauts hours to ensure there are no leaks and to equalize the pressure between the two spacecraft before the hatch is opened, and the new residents can finally enter the space station. That will occur around 1:40 a.m. on Tuesday, and the astronauts will hold a brief boarding ceremony with the station’s current crew.

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What will the astronauts do aboard the space station?

The astronauts are boarding the space station during a month that marks 20 years of people living continuously in space. They will join three other astronauts already there: Kate Rubins of NASA and two Russians, Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov.

They will be doing what astronauts have been doing for the past two decades on the space station: overseeing scientific experiments, performing maintenance tasks, talking to students on the ground.

The astronauts, for example, will be collecting their own biological samples to help scientists on the ground study how dietary changes affect the body. The astronauts will also be growing radishes, the latest experiment to explore whether food can grown in space. (Red lettuce and mizuna mustard greens are among earlier foods that the astronauts have studied.) They will also test whether fungi can break apart asteroid rock and help extract useful metals — a scientific prelude to extraterrestrial mining operations, and a follow-up to a similar, successful experiment that used bacteria.

Delays in the completion of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon and another capsule built by Boeing, the Starliner, have often limited the number of astronauts on board at the station at any onetime in recent years. With seven astronauts on board, there will be more hands to complete science work and to address maintenance tasks. The largest number of astronauts ever on board at once is 13.

Why is SpaceX carrying astronauts to the space station?

In the past, NASA led the design and operation of its own passenger spacecraft, from the first Mercury capsules to the Apollo capsules that went to the moon, and most recently the space shuttles. But that was expensive.

By choosing a commercial provider, NASA hopes to save money and to spur development of new space businesses, as SpaceX can also sell seats on its Dragon capsule to non-NASA customers. (NASA has also selected another private company, Boeing, whose capsule’s first flight with passengers has been delayed until next year.)

NASA and SpaceX this week completed the certification process., which provides the space agency’s seal of approval that says SpaceX has met the specifications set out for regularly taking NASA astronauts to orbit.

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Is the capsule big enough for 4 astronauts?

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The Crew Dragon capsule has about as much interior space as an S.U.V., which might feel a little cramped during the the 19 hours of flight. Credit...Joel Kowsky/NASA, via Associated Press

The Crew Dragon is a gumdrop-shaped capsule — an upgraded version of SpaceX’s original Dragon capsule, which has been used many times to carry cargo. It is roughly comparable in size to the Apollo capsule that took NASA astronauts to the moon in the 1960s and 1970s. Earlier NASA capsules — Mercury and Gemini — were considerably smaller.

SpaceX says the Crew Dragon can be configured with seating for seven people. The capsule has about as much interior space as a sport utility vehicle. As you can probably imagine, you and six of your friends may be able to pile in for a trip lasting a few hours but most likely not much longer than that. (There is a bathroom.)

The missions for NASA will take four astronauts at a time.

The inside is far more advanced than what NASA astronauts sat in 50 years ago and even sleeker than the space shuttles. The computing power available is much greater now, allowing touch screens to replace the buttons and joy sticks that were used in earlier spacecraft.

If you think you’re able to fly a Crew Dragon yourself, SpaceX provided a web version of the system that the NASA astronauts would use if they needed to override the spacecraft’s automated systems. Some YouTube users have helpfully explained how to actually complete the docking.

How was the Crew Dragon’s first round-trip with astronauts on board?

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The astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley give a thumbs up after returning to Earth in a Crew Dragon capsule in August. Credit...Nasa Via Getty Images

The flight, lifting off on May 31, went almost flawlessly.

It was originally meant to last only a week or two, focused on testing the Crew Dragon systems, but because of years of delays in getting the commercial systems up and running, the space station was short staffed.

The two astronauts on the demonstration mission, Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley, ended up spending a bit more than two months on the space station as short-term crew members helping to take care of maintenance and science experiments.

They splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico off Florida on Aug. 2, avoiding a tropical storm in the Atlantic Ocean but not a flotilla of small boats with curious onlookers that swarmed around the capsule as it bobbed in the water.

Later, SpaceX discovered the Crew Dragon’s heat shield had suffered more erosion than expected during the tumultuous re-entry into the atmosphere that all passenger vehicles must endure. NASA and SpaceX officials said the damage never endangered the spacecraft or the astronauts, but some modifications were made to the Crew-1 capsule to prevent a repeat.

NASA also postponed the original early November launch date of the Crew-1 mission after an issue was detected with the Falcon 9 rocket’s engines.

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How have things changed at NASA since the last SpaceX astronaut launch?

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The NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine said he would not be staying in his post in the Biden administration. Credit...Red Huber/Getty Images

With the election of Joseph R. Biden Jr. as the next president of the United States, there are likely to be changes in some NASA programs, and in the American approach to space. But the commercial crew program, with SpaceX and Boeing taking astronauts to the space station, is not likely to be altered. The decision to hire private companies for the transportation of astronauts to orbit was made during the Obama administration when Mr. Biden was vice president.

In an interview last week with the magazine Aviation Week, Jim Bridenstine, the NASA administrator, said he would not, even if asked, stay on in his current role past the Jan. 20 inauguration of Mr. Biden. Mr. Bridenstine was a Republican congressman from Oklahoma before he endured a bruising Senate confirmation fight in 2018.

Mr. Biden has placed climate change among the top issues that his administration will address, suggesting a greater emphasis on the earth sciences division of NASA, which studies our planet from orbit. He has said very little about NASA in particular.

Mr. Bridenstine’s positions on climate change were criticized before he was confirmed. But most observers of NASA have considered his stewardship of the agency, including its climate programs, to be free of the attacks on federal science programs that have been a characteristic of President Trump’s term.

The main civilian space goal of the Trump administration, to send astronauts back to the moon by 2024, is likely to continue during the next four years. But the ambitious timeline, which was widely viewed as unrealistic, will slip into the future.

What other plans does SpaceX have for carrying people to space?

A couple of companies have announced that they plan to buy flights on the Crew Dragon to take wealthy private citizens for out-of-this-world vacations. One company, Axiom Space, will take three tourists to the space station, perhaps as soon as late 2021.

One passenger could be the actor Tom Cruise. The NASA administrator, Jim Bridenstine, confirmed in May that NASA was working with Mr. Cruise to help make a movie at the space station.

Michael T. Suffredini, the president and chief executive of Axiom Space, would not confirm whether Mr. Cruise was booked on the Axiom flight, saying the company does not disclose information about its customers.

Last week, Axiom said all three available seats had been sold. The fourth seat would be filled by an Axiom employee, Michael López-Alegría, a former NASA astronaut.

The other company, Space Adventures, is offering a free-flying Crew Dragon flight that will not dock at the space station, but instead will go around Earth on a highly elliptical orbit that will provide passengers with a view of the planet from a very high perch.

SpaceX has begun development of a much larger vehicle called Starship that is to eventually go to the moon and Mars. So far, prototypes have made a couple of small hops, although some of the engine tests have ended in spectacular explosions. One of its first passengers is expected to be Yusaku Maezawa, the founder of a Japanese clothing company, and whomever he decides to bring along.

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Elon Musk ‘most likely’ has Covid-19.

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Elon Musk visiting one of his factories in Germany in September. Credit...Odd Andersen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Elon Musk, the SpaceX chief executive, said in a tweet on Saturday that he “most likely” had a “moderate case” of Covid-19.

He made the announcement the day before his company was to launch four astronauts to the International Space Station in the Crew Dragon capsule that it built for NASA, and after months of raising doubts about the severity of the coronavirus pandemic that has caused the deaths of more than 1.3 million people around the world, including some 245,000 in the United States.

Shortly after midnight on Friday morning, Mr. Musk said on Twitter that he had taken four rapid antigen tests.

“Something extremely bogus is going on,” Mr. Musk wrote. “Was tested for covid four times today. Two tests came back negative, two came back positive. Same machine, same test, same nurse.”

Antigen tests — like the one from the company BD that Mr. Musk used — look for pieces of coronavirus protein and are cheap and convenient, typically delivering results in minutes. But they are also less reliable than laboratory tests that use a technique called polymerase chain reaction, or P.C.R., which hunts for fragments of genetic material. Such P.C.R.-based tests are widely considered the “gold standard” in infectious disease diagnostics. It was at least one of these tests that seemed to confirm Mr. Musk’s infection on Saturday.

Mr. Musk also tweeted on Sunday that he had experienced mild symptoms of Covid-19 last week but was no longer feeling ill, perhaps in part because he was taking over-the-counter medication.

Antigen tests are approved for use only in people within the first few days after their symptoms appear, and may perform less well in asymptomatic individuals.

On Friday and Saturday, Mr. Musk took to Twitter again to cast doubt on the validity of P.C.R.-based tests, asking his followers to educate him on whether the diagnostic tools were likely to generate false positives.

A saliva sample sent for P.C.R. testing had come back positive, Mr. Musk said early Saturday morning. A number associated with the positive result, called the cycle threshold, also revealed that Mr. Musk was likely carrying moderately high levels of the virus in his body. In accordance with federal guidelines, Mr. Musk should isolate for at least 10 days from when he first started feeling ill.

But Mr. Musk suggested that he would continue to get tested in the hopes that he would eventually receive “better results.”

Experts responding to the tweets repeatedly noted that it is inappropriate to use test results to break out of isolation.

Mr. Musk also misleadingly referred to the coronavirus as “a type of cold.” Although other coronaviruses can cause common colds, Covid-19 is far deadlier than these mild diseases, and it has also caused debilitating symptoms months later for many survivors of the virus.

Since the spring, Mr. Musk has repeatedly voiced his frustration with the pandemic and its economic repercussions, and downplayed its severity. In May, he openly defied local regulations to reopen Tesla’s California factory, after county officials ordered it to close, arguing that the restrictions, put in place to curb the spread of the coronavirus, were overly aggressive and an impingement on basic rights. He ultimately threatened to move the company’s headquarters out of state.

Mr. Musk has not stated whether he plans to be on hand to see off the astronauts, as he was in May when SpaceX’s capsule first attempted to carry astronauts to orbit. But Jim Bridenstine, the NASA administrator, said at a news conference on Friday that NASA required self-isolation for anyone who tested positive.

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