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ISS NASA Space

4 Astronauts Aboard SpaceX Crew Dragon Successfully Dock With Space Station (npr.org) 67

Four astronauts aboard their SpaceX Dragon capsule "Resilience" have arrived at the International Space Station, circling 262 miles above the Earth, where they will stay until spring. From a report: The capsule lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center Sunday evening atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, chasing the ISS for 27 hours before matching its altitude and speed for an orbital dock. The flight marks only the second crewed flight for Crew Dragon, which became the first commercial vehicle to put humans in orbit when astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken launched in May. "SpaceX, this is Resilience. Excellent job, right down the center," commander Hopkins radioed to mission control after the docking. "SpaceX and NASA, congratulations." The flight marks another milestone for SpaceX flying its first fully operational mission. After the May launch, designated "Demo-2" with Hurley and Behnken, NASA certified the capsule for operational use in its Commercial Crew program. The Resilience crew includes three NASA astronauts and one from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency who were mostly passengers during the flight of Crew Dragon, which generally flies without human input and docks to the ISS autonomously.
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4 Astronauts Aboard SpaceX Crew Dragon Successfully Dock With Space Station

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  • And not the name of the crew. Way to not make that confusing, guys.
  • Space "Karen" may be a complete douche canoe, but he does get shit done.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2020 @05:05AM (#60733534)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Vega VV15's second stage failed. Now VV17's upper stage failed. We had our small satellite on the VV16 launch. I can't tell you how much relief there is in our company today. 16 is our new lucky number.
  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2020 @08:10AM (#60733774)

    With the successful launch of the crew to the ISS, here is what our president-elect had to say [9cache.com] on this achievement, compared against our glorious infallible leader.

    • Nice speeches are nice, but Trump has shown the space program more love than any president in the last 40 years. Let's see what Biden does with it. Prepare to be underwhelmed.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Shmoe ( 17051 )

        By taking credit for programs that began under another administration and came to fruition under his? Bridenstine wasn't bad at all, but to say these things weren't already in motion to occur is disingenuous.

        • By taking credit for programs that began under another administration and came to fruition under his? Bridenstine wasn't bad at all, but to say these things weren't already in motion to occur is disingenuous.

          If you paid attention to history you's see it's not unheard of to cancel projects from the previous administration to save money and prevent them from getting credit, then starting your own new launch system.

          As hard as it is to imagine, just not doing that is a good thing. The earlier heavy launch system was cancelled in such a manner. Then the Space Shuttle was cancelled, in favor of Rooskies doing the launches, paid by us. Then things got troublesome with Russia, and it didn't seem so brilliant any mor

      • Hmm. You may be right, we may be underwhelmed.

        In 'Bama's admin, the nation was recovering from teh Great Recession. Shrub's admin scheduled the wind-down of STS, and 'Bama executed on the plan. And I imagine that we're still paying off the debt on the ISS.

        Sleepy Joe wants to spend bucks on infrastructure as his Big Program. Hopefully NASA, while perhaps not having a growing budget, will have a stable budget. I'd be good with that.

    • That's the difference between a person speaking totally for themselves and unfiltered, and a committee determining every single word that is written or spoken. You can guess which is which.

      Personally I prefer neither end of that spectrum for a President.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Trump isn't wrong. Imagine cancelling your only crew launch system without anything to take its place.

      • Well, we were running close to the statistical chance of another SLS failure. Engineers estimated a 2% failure rate on the system. And Boeing probably said "we're within 2 years of another launcher" or something like that.

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      It's been said NASA has been non-partisan but not political. It was created because of politics (response to Sputnik) but has been able to stay clear of the bitter divides we have these days. Maybe. In some ways Artemis is a Trump campaign program, it was never widely mentioned because just about everyone outside the space business and fan clubs have never heard of Artemis or SLS. Everyone knows of Musk and Dragon. If Artemis cancelled or significantly delayed from 2024 landing, I'd say it is more of lack a

  • by turp182 ( 1020263 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2020 @11:51AM (#60734404) Journal

    The takeoff and stage releases were awesome. The docking was very boring (but certainly not to those doing it, process intensive), but nice to see once everyone was in.

    Soyuz only carries 3 people. This is the first time since the Space Shuttle that 4 passengers were on carried up.

    Amazing job Space X!

     

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There was room for 7 passengers originally, but then NASA changed their minds about retro-propulsive landings and wanted parachutes instead. That entailed rearranging seats (and losing 3) to reduce G-forces on landing approach.

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