NASA and SpaceX want to launch the Crew-9 mission across the center of this month.
Crew-9, SpaceX’s subsequent astronaut launch to the Worldwide Area Station (ISS) for NASA, is at present set for Aug. 18. The 4 astronauts that can be on board are commander Zena Cardman, pilot Nick Hague, mission specialist Stephanie Wilson and mission specialist Alexsandr Gorbunov, of Russia’s house company Roscosmos.
The mission nonetheless has to get remaining launch approval from NASA, after the second stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket failed on July 11 as a consequence of an oxygen leak. Whereas the rocket has been cleared for flight and just lately resumed uncrewed launches of SpaceX’s Starlink satellites, NASA needs to make sure the car is secure for crews forward of the goal Aug. 18 launch date.
“We have been following alongside all over the investigation,” stated Steve Stich, supervisor of NASA’s Business Crew Program, throughout a Crew-9 media briefing on July 26.
Stich added that SpaceX has already modified out the sensor {hardware} that was answerable for the July 11 oxygen leak on a separate second stage, and that NASA feels assured the change will certify Crew-9 for launch.
“We adopted that testing, and we’ll comply with the identical testing on our stage, so we’ll get a verify of that sensor within the second stage check,” Stich stated. “We’ll work by way of all the info, work by way of all of the evaluation and certification, after which we’ll be able to go fly.”
As its identify implies, Crew-9 would be the ninth astronaut rotation that SpaceX flies to the ISS for NASA. Nevertheless, will probably be the tenth crewed flight of the Dragon spacecraft as a part of the house company’s Business Crew Program. The primary was Demo-2, a two-astronaut check flight to the ISS that launched in Might 2020.
Crew Dragon has additionally flown a number of non-public astronaut missions to orbit and to the ISS, together with the historic all-civilian Inspiration4 flight in 2021 and three flights for Houston-based Axiom Area.