Daily Archives: February 5, 2024

Teams Hold Flight Readiness Review for NASA’s PACE Mission PACE Mission – NASA Blogs

Posted: February 5, 2024 at 6:26 am

NASA and SpaceX technicians safely encapsulate NASAs PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) spacecraft in SpaceXs Falcon 9 payload fairings on Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2024, at the Astrotech Space Operations Facility near the agencys Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The fairing halves protect the spacecraft from aerodynamic pressure and heating during the ascent phase of launch.

NASA, SpaceX, and PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) mission managers met today, Thursday, Feb. 1, to conduct a Flight Readiness Review at the agencys Kennedy Space Center in Florida. During the review, teams provided an update on the mission status and certified the readiness to initiate final launch preparation activities.

Once launched, PACE will use three instruments called the Ocean Color Instrument, Spectro-polarimeter for Planetary Exploration, and the Hyper-Angular Rainbow Polarimeter No.2 to collect data on clouds, aerosols, and phytoplankton growth that can determine ocean color. Measuring the color and amount of light will help scientists better understand the types and locations of microscopic algae, which are vital to the health of Earths oceans and its marine life.PACE will contribute to NASAs more than 20 years of global satellite observations of ocean biology and key measurements related to air quality and climate.

Up next, SpaceX will roll the fully integrated Falcon 9 rocket carrying the encapsulated PACE spacecraft to the launch pad at Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Once vertical, the launch team will perform final checkouts ahead of liftoff scheduled for no earlier than 1:33 a.m. EST on Tuesday, Feb. 6.

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Space Force to get its 1st astronaut on SpaceX launch this year – Orlando Sentinel

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NASA announced the four members for the planned August SpaceX mission to rotate crew on the International Space Station and it includes the first member of the U.S. Space Force flying to orbit.

The crew member, which Space Force calls a guardian, has already been to space, but for NASA as a member of the Air Force.

Piloting the SpaceX Crew-9 flight will be U.S. Space Force Col. Nick Hague, who previously had a scary initial ride the Air Force technically considered having reached space in 2018 that ended with an abort. It happened as he and a Russian crewmate cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin aboard a Soyuz capsule blasted away from a malfunctioning booster after launch from Kazakhstan.

It went from normal to something was wrong pretty quick, he said after the abort. We werent going to make it to orbit that day, so the mission changed to getting back down on the ground as safely as we could.

The altitude of the Soyuz capsule passed the 50-mile mark the U.S. considers for awarding astronaut status, although its shy of the Karman line, which is the internationally recognized line for having made it to space at around 62 miles high.

I got to experience a few seconds of weightlessness and I was able to watch a few things float around in the capsule, he said. I was also able to look out the window primarily to make sure, Hey, are we in a good attitude? Are we stable? Are we ready to come back down? But also to look out the window and realize, you know, looking down at the curvature of the Earth and out into the blackness of space, and realizing I got close but it wasnt going to be this time.

The duo got another shot, though, five months later in 2019, and that time they made it past the Karman line along with NASA astronaut Christina Koch. Hague spent more than 200 days on board the ISS. So Crew-9 will be his third or second flight to space depending on who you ask.

Commanding the Crew-9 flight will be rookie Zena Cardman, a member of the astronaut candidate class of 2017 that was nicknamed The Turtles by the astronaut class that preceded them.

She will be the 10th Turtle to make it space following Crew-8s upcoming flight targeting late February taking up classmate Matthew Dominick. That leaves only one Turtle without an space assignment yet Jonny Kim although he was named among the original Artemis astronaut candidates.

Also flying will be NASA astronaut and mission specialist Stephanie Wilson, who flew three times on Space Shuttle Discovery on STS-121, STS-120, and STS-131 logging 42 days in space, and Roscomos cosmonaut and mission specialist Aleksandr Gorbunov, making his first trip to space.

The quartet will spend about six months on board the station as part of Expeditions 71 and 72 to be relieved by either a SpaceX or possibly Boeing Starliner mission in early 2025.

Hagues return in 2019 led him to a post-flight role at the Pentagon with the Air Force, but working as leadership as director of test and evaluation for the newly formed Space Force. In 2021, Hague transferred from the Air Force to the Space Force, which at just over four years old now has about 14,000 military and civilian Guardians. Since August 2022, Hague has been back with NASA working on the Starliner program.

Roughly two-thirds of NASA astronauts have served in the U.S. Armed Forces.

Being a part of this mission is a unique honor, but its truly a collective effort, Hague said in a Space Force press release. Guardians worldwide ensure safe and secure operations of critical systems for launch and on station.

The ISS has been continuously populated since November 2020, first by alternating crews from the Space Shuttle Program and Souyz launches from Russia. After the shuttles stopped flying in 2011, it took nearly 9 years before SpaceX restarted human spaceflight to the ISS from the U.S. with the Demo-2 mission in May 2020.

Since then SpaceX has flown 46 humans to orbit on its fleet of Crew Dragon spacecraft including seven operational flights to the ISS for NASA and its ISS partners. Its also sent up three private missions for Axiom Space to the ISS.

A good portion of them are on the station right now, which has a population of 11 for now.

Right now both the Crew Dragon Endurance and Freedom are docked to the ISS as the four members of Crew-7 that arrived last August were joined earlier this month by the four members of the Axiom 3 mission.

Their departure and the arrival of replacement crews mark a busy first half of 2024 for the station.

The Ax-3 crew will climb aboard Crew Dragon Freedom as early as Saturday for their ride home to splash down off the coast of Florida while Crew-7 will await the arrival of Crew-8 thats slated for a late February launch from Kennedy Space Center before they make their return trip as well. A replacement Soyuz crew is slated to arrive in March.

And then in April, the first crewed test flight of Starliner is slated to launch from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas V to send up a pair of NASA astronauts for a short stay in Boeings efforts to join SpaceX as regular flight providers under NASAs Commercial Crew Program.

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Starlab Space selects SpaceX’s Starship for historic launch of the commercial space station SatNews – SatNews

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Starlab Space LLC (Starlab Space), the JV between Voyager Space and Airbus Defence and Space, has selected SpaceX to launch the Starlab commercial space station to LEO.

Starship, SpaceXs fully reusable transportation system designed to carry both crew and cargo to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond, will launch Starlab in a single mission prior to the decommissioning of the International Space Station.

As a continuously crewed, free-flying space station, Starlab will serve a global customer base of space agencies, researchers, and companies, ensuring a continued human presence in LEO and a seamless transition of microgravity research from the International Space Station into the new commercial space station era. Starlab will launch on a single flight, be fully outfitted on the ground, and ready to permanently host four crew members in LEO to conduct microgravity research and advanced scientific discovery.

The Starlab team has advanced through multiple program milestones over the past year, including completion of the Systems Requirements Review, System Definition Review, Human in the Loop testing, and more. Starlab Space recently announced a teaming agreement with Northrop Grumman and plans to collaborate with the European Space Agency. Additional Starlab partners include Hilton Hotels and The Ohio State University.

SpaceXs history of success and reliability led our team to select Starship to orbit Starlab, said Dylan Taylor, Chairman and CEO, Voyager Space. SpaceX is the unmatched leader for high-cadence launches and we are proud Starlab will be launched to orbit in a single flight by Starship.

Starlabs single-launch solution continues to demonstrate not only what is possible, but how the future of commercial space is happening now, said Tom Ochinero, Senior Vice President of Commercial Business at SpaceX. The SpaceX team is excited for Starship to launch Starlab to support humanitys continued presence in low-Earth orbit on our way to making life multiplanetary.

Starlab Space LLC is a transatlantic joint venture between Voyager Space and Airbus that is designing, building, and will operate the Starlab commercial space station. Starlab will serve a global customer base of space agencies, researchers, and companies, ensuring a continued human presence in low-Earth orbit and a seamless transition of microgravity science and research from the International Space Station into the new commercial space station era.

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Starlab Space selects SpaceX's Starship for historic launch of the commercial space station SatNews - SatNews

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NASA Names Members Of ISS SpaceX Crew-9 Mission – Aviation Week

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SpaceX Crew-9 mission crewmembers (left to right) astronaut Stephanie Wilson,Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, astronaut Nick Hague, and astronaut Zena Cardman.

Credit: NASA

HOUSTONThree NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut have been selected for the SpaceX Crew-9 Dragon mission launch to the International Space Station (ISS), planned for no earlier than August. NASAs Zena Cardman, a geoscientist selected for astronaut training by the agency in 2017, will serve as...

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Wife Sues SpaceX After Rocket Test Leaves Husband in Coma – Futurism

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"It would have been nice to get a call from Elon Musk. But I guess workers are just disposable to them." Expendable Employees

SpaceX is being sued for negligence by the wife of an employee who was critically injured during a botched rocket engine test that left him in a coma, Reuters reports, as concerns over the workplace safety of the Elon Musk-led company continue to mount.

The employee, Francisco Cabada, was one of over 600 SpaceX injuries that were revealed in a Reuters investigationin November of last year.

Cabada was injured in January 2022, when a piece of a V2 Raptor engine, which powers SpaceX's Starship, broke off during pressure testing. It was sent flying into Cabada's head, fracturing his skull. Over two years later, the father of three is still in a coma.

The lawsuit was filed on his behalf by his wife, Ydy Cabada, in a state court in Los Angeles last week.

"It would have been nice to get a call from Elon Musk," Ydy told Reuters in November. "But I guess workers are just disposable to them."

According to anonymous SpaceX employees who spoke to Reuters, the part that struck Cabada, a fuel-controller assembly cover, had a known flaw that was not addressed before the test was carried out.

Just as damning, the investigation also revealed that senior managers at the Hawthorne California site where Cabada was injured were repeatedly warned about the dangers of rushing the engine's development.

The sheer tally of injuries suggests that there's a systemic problem at work one that's already led to the death an employee of which SpaceX tried to keep under wraps. Many more have suffered broken or dislocated bones, crushed hands, lacerations, and even injuries that resulted in amputations, according to Reuters.

Per the news agency's investigation, both current and former employees have blamed the unsafe environment on Musk's extremely demanding deadlines a trademark of his leadership.

SpaceX, after all, is known to embrace the Silicon Valley ethos of "move fast and break things," which holds that with more failures comes quicker improvements.

Sometimes, though, things can "break" quite catastrophically, and you end up with an exploded Starship or, far more tragically, injured employees.

It's worth noting that this isn't the only Musk-led venture with workplace safety concerns. For years, the EV automaker Tesla has come under fire for gruesome injuries that have occurred at its factories, amidst consistently re-emerging reports that workers are forced to sleep at the assembly line.

What will come of the lawsuit is unclear, but it seems that as long as a quick turnaround is the bottom line at these companies, workers will continue to pay the price.

More on SpaceX: SpaceX Buys Mysterious Aircraft

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SpaceX, NASA Targeting Monday for Dragon Splashdown Off Coast of Florida, AX-3 Mission Astronauts Return – SpaceCoastDaily.com

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Home Home SpaceX, NASA Targeting Monday for Dragon Splashdown Off Coast of Florida, AX-3 Mission Astronauts Return

BREVARD COUNTY CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDA SpaceX, Axiom Space, and NASA are targeting no earlier than Monday, February 5 for Dragon and the Ax-3 astronauts to depart from the International Space Station.

After performing a series of burns to move away from the space station, Dragon will conduct multiple orbit-lowering maneuvers, jettison its trunk, and re-enter Earths atmosphere before splashing down off the coast of Florida.

Aboard the spacecraft will be Ax-3 astronauts Michael Lpez-Alegra and Walter Villadei , Alper Gezeravc , and Marcus Wandt, who flew to the space station on Dragon when Falcon 9 launched the spacecraft from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, January 18 at 4:49 p.m. ET.

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Watch Live: NASA Coverage of Axiom Mission 3 Departure From Space Station – SciTechDaily

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The SpaceX Dragon Freedom spacecraft carrying the four-member Axiom Mission 3 (Ax-3) crew is pictured approaching the International Space Station 260 miles above China north of the Himalayas. Credit: NASA

Axiom Mission 3s return from the ISS, involving NASA, Axiom Space, and SpaceX, has been delayed to February 5 due to weather. Live coverage of the undocking and return processes will be provided across multiple NASA platforms.

NASA, Axiom Space, and SpaceX now are targeting no earlier than Monday, February 5, for the undocking of Axiom Mission 3 from the International Space Station. Teams are standing down from the Saturday, February 3, undocking opportunity of the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft and Axiom crew members due to weather conditions off the coast of Florida. The next weather review is planned for 8 p.m. EST on Saturday, February 3. NASA will provide additional information on coverage.

NASA will provide live coverage of the undocking and departure of the Axiom Mission 3 (Ax-3) private astronaut flight from the International Space Station before the crew returns to Earth.

The four-member astronaut crew will undock from the space-facing port of the stations Harmony module in a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft to begin the journey home and splashdown off the coast of Florida.

NASA will provide live coverage of space station joint operations with Axiom Space and SpaceX. Coverage of hatch-closure preparations will begin at 4 a.m. NASA coverage of undocking will resume at 5:45 a.m.

Coverage will be available on NASA+, NASA Television, the NASA app, YouTube, and the agencys website. Learn how to stream NASA TV through a variety of platforms including social media.

Aboard the International Space Station, Axiom Mission-3 crewmembers Michael Lpez-Alegra, Walter Villadei, Alper Gezeravc, and Marcus Wandt provided farewell remarks on February 2 ahead of their scheduled undocking from the space station on February 3 (now delayed to February 5). The crew has been living and working on the International Space Station since January 20 following a launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on January 18. Axiom Mission-3 is the third private astronaut mission to the space station. Credit: NASA

The four private astronauts, Michael Lpez-Alegra, Walter Villadei, Marcus Wandt, and Alper Gezeravci, will complete about two weeks in space at the conclusion of their mission. The Axiom crew, along with Expedition 70, highlighted their stay aboard the space station during farewell remarks on Friday in advance of their undocking.

Their SpaceX Dragon will return to Earth with more than 550 pounds of cargo, including NASA hardware and data from more than 30 different experiments the crew conducted during their mission. Splashdown is expected about 7 p.m.

Ax-3, the third all-private astronaut mission to the International Space Station, successfully lifted off from NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida on January 18.

NASAs coverage ends approximately 30 minutes after undocking when space station joint operations with Axiom Space and SpaceX mission teams conclude. Axiom Space will resume coverage of Dragons re-entry and splashdown on the companys website.

The Ax-3 mission is part of NASAs effort to foster a commercial market in low Earth orbit and continue a new era of space exploration that enables more people and organizations to fly multiple mission objectives. This partnership expands the arc of human spaceflight and opens access to low Earth orbit and the International Space Station to more people, science, and commercial opportunities.

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