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NASA Space

SpaceX One Step Closer To Launching Astronaut 70

BarbaraHudson writes SpaceX has passed NASA's "certification baseline review," which required the company to outline exactly how it plans to ferry crews to and from the International Space Station using the Dragon spacecraft and Falcon 9 rocket under SpaceX's Commercial Crew Transportation Capability (CCtCap) contract with NASA. The contract will include at least one test flight with an astronaut in the spacecraft.
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SpaceX One Step Closer To Launching Astronaut

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  • this is good news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @03:04PM (#48757303) Homepage
    I didnt expect this news for at least another year. Ever since the shuttles have retired i have been patiently waiting the day we get a new craft back up and running.
  • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @03:47PM (#48757731) Homepage Journal

    but they only send up 3 people at a time to ISS. Seems like a waste. They should set up a lottery for an extra person or two, seems reasonable. I'll buy some tickets.

    • The dragon will be in service much longer than the ISS. SpaceX is playing the long game.

      I'm also excited to see a future where returning astronauts no longer have to be plucked out of the ocean (old school capsules) or have a really hard landing in a cornfield (soyuz). The super-draco engines on the dragon v2 are designed to be used as retro-rockets so the capsule could land anywhere (softly!) with pinpoint accuracy. Of course, it still can drop into the ocean safely if the engines aren't nominal.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      Shuttle missions took 7 people up to swap 3 people on ISS, was that a waste too? After the initial missions, I would not be surprised if they send up extra people who stay a week and go down on the old capsule with the previous station crew. They just have to swap some seats around. (Each astronaut currently gets a custom Soyuz seat molded specifically for his or her own butt.)
      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        Each astronaut who flies on the Soyuz, even if it's just a return journey, has to be trained and checked out in Russia for these craft. Though most landings happen without incident, it's not some simple, routine thing to land in Soyuz. Things can and do go wrong, and each person in Soyuz has to know what to do. So even crew members that arrived on the shuttle had to be checked out on the Soyuz, whether that was for escape purposes, or for the regular ride home. The same thing would be required for crew

        • >

          I'm not sure how long Dragon is allowed to remain in space. Would be nice if they could use it as an emergency exit as well.

          The last paragraph in the article:

          Dragon is expected to last up to 210 days while docked to the International Space Station, providing an escape route if astronauts need to leave the orbiting complex quickly.

          You're welcome, and happy 2015 :-)

    • If you don't mind sitting in the back of the capsule, not breathing or eating, for 250 days.

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