La NASA et SpaceX reportent la date de lancement de la mission Crew-4 à destination de la Station spatiale internationale

NASA Astronautes de SpaceX Crew-4

Les astronautes de SpaceX Crew-4 de la NASA participent à une session d’entraînement au siège de SpaceX à Hawthorne, CA. De gauche à droite : Jessica Watkins, astronaute de la NASA et spécialiste de la mission SpaceX Crew-4 ; Robert “Bob” Hines, astronaute de la NASA et pilote de SpaceX Crew-4 ; Kjell Lindgren, astronaute de la NASA et commandant de SpaceX Crew-4 ; et Samantha Cristoforetti, astronaute de l’ESA (Agence spatiale européenne) et spécialiste de la mission Crew-4, d’Italie. Crédit : SpaceX

Axiom Space et SpaceX are adjusting the launch date for the Axiom Mission 1 (Ax-1) to the International Space Station to allow teams to complete final spacecraft processing ahead of the mission. The Ax-1 crew will fly on Dragon Endeavour to and from the space station. After 10 days in orbit, the Ax-1 crew will splash down off the coast of Florida.

NASA SpaceX Crew-4

The official crew portrait of the SpaceX Crew-4 astronauts representing NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. From left are, Pilot Robert Hines, Mission Specialists Samantha Cristoforetti and Jessica Watkins, and Commander Kjell Lindgren. Hines, Watkins, and Lindgren are NASA astronauts and Cristoforetti is an ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut. Credit: NASA

NASA and SpaceX also will adjust the target launch date for the agency’s SpaceX Crew-4 mission to the International Space Station to allow appropriate spacing for operations and post-flight data reviews between human spaceflight missions and to allow for multiple consecutive launch attempts based on the orbital mechanics for arrival to the space station. The current no earlier than launch date is Tuesday, April 19, pending completion of program reviews expected early next week to formalize the new target. (Previously the mission was scheduled to launch Friday, April 15.) Crew-4 will carry an international crew of four astronauts to the orbital complex on a new Dragon spacecraft and flight proven Falcon 9 rocket for a science expedition mission.

Leave a Comment