SpaceX successfully launched the Crew 6 mission .With the launch of SpaceX’s Crew 6 mission this morning, four people, including an Emirati astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut, were sent to the International Space Station.
SpaceX successfully launched the Crew 6 mission
SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket took off from the launch pad of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday at 00:34 local time (09:04 Iran time) and sent the Dragon capsule carrying four astronauts into near-Earth orbit. In this mission, which is carried out by SpaceX for NASA, the astronauts will reach the International Space Station after a 24.5-hour flight.
SpaceX is making its sixth operational human spaceflight for NASA, and thus today’s mission is called Crew 6. The first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket, which was a shiny and clean booster on the launch pad, flew for the first time in this mission; But the Crew Dragon spacecraft carrying the crew of Crew 6 is making its fourth flight and has now flown into space more than any other Crew Dragon capsule. This spacecraft named Endor was previously present in the Demo 2 and Crew 2 missions, as well as the Axiom 1 private space flight to the International Space Station.
Today’s flawless launch took place three days after the first failed rocket launch attempt. On Monday, March 8, the Falcon 9 flight was canceled almost two minutes before the end of the countdown due to a malfunction in the ignition system. NASA and SpaceX attributed the problem to a filter blockage in the systems that support the rocket on the ground until the moment of launch. Due to the presence of this problematic filter, the proper amount of liquid used to ignite the rocket’s Merlin 1D engines did not reach the rocket’s first stage.
Read More: The last survivor of Apollo 11 pays tribute to NASA’s Artemis mission
Two NASA astronauts named Steven Bowen as the mission commander and Warren Hoberg as the pilot are present in today’s flight, and Sultan Al Niyadi, the United Arab Emirates astronaut, and Andrey Fedeyev, the Russian cosmonaut, are accompanying them both as mission specialists.
After separating from the upper stage and the Dragon capsule, the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket returned to Earth and minutes later landed on the SpaceX unmanned spacecraft called “Just Read the Instructions”.
After reaching orbit, Hoberg told SpaceX’s flight control center, “As a rookie astronaut, it’s been a great trip, thank you. “I would say [Dragon] is an engineering marvel and I am very fortunate to have had the opportunity to fly this amazing spacecraft.” It has been a little more than seven years since the first successful landing of the Falcon 9 rocket on Earth. That flight leading to the landing was just the 20th launch of the Falcon 9 rocket by SpaceX; While this morning’s launch was the 277th flight of this missile. After that successful landing, SpaceX had several failures to recover the rocket and land it on floating platforms.
However, since the last failed Falcon landing on an unmanned spacecraft in February 2021, SpaceX has managed to achieve a record of 100 consecutive booster landings. Falcon 9’s successful landing this morning marked the 100th consecutive recovery.