SpaceX will launch its first crewed mission as early as May
By Mike Wehner @MikeWehner
March 19th, 2020 at 6:36 PM
NASA and SpaceX are targeting the launch of the first crewed mission in a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft for mid-to-late May, according to the US space agency. The launch will be the first crewed mission into space launched from US soil since the last launch of the Space Shuttle way back in 2011.
The launch, which will take place from NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida, will see a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket fire the Crew Dragon to the International Space Station. Onboard the spacecraft will be NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley. The mission follows a successful uncrewed test flight of the Crew Dragon to the ISS months earlier.
NASA revealed the launch window timing in a new media release. NASA and SpaceX are currently targeting no earlier than mid-to-late May for launch, the release reads. This second demonstration mission of the Crew Dragon spacecraft is another end-to-end flight test of SpaceXs human spaceflight system, which will include launch, docking, splashdown and recovery operations. It is the final flight test of the system before SpaceX is certified to carry out operational crew flights to and from the space station for NASA.
SpaceXs partnership with NASA for a crew-capable spacecraft is part of the agencys Commercial Crew program. Both SpaceX and Boeing were tasked by NASA to develop a spacecraft and launch system to deliver NASA astronauts into space without having to rely on seats aboard Russian rockets. SpaceX has been in the lead since the beginning, though both companies have seen their share of setbacks and delays.
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https://bgr.com/2020/03/19/crew-dragon-launch-nasa-spacex-2020-may/