SpaceX launches new era of spaceflight with company's first crewed mission
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDAAgainst a backdrop of shifting clouds and patches of welcome blue sky, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket roared to life at 3:22 p.m. ET at NASAs Kennedy Space Center (KSC), warming the already sweltering, sticky air with blindingly bright rocket fire and sending tremors through the Florida coast. Strapped into a spacecraft atop the 229-foot-tall rocket, veteran astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley soared into the sky, marking a triumphant return to orbit from U.S. shores.
SpaceX, Dragon, were go for launch, lets light this candle, Hurley said to SpaceX mission control in Hawthorne, California, just before liftoff.
Behnken and Hurleyoccasionally referred to by their colleagues as Dr. Bob and Chunkyare now cruising to the International Space Station, a journey that will take approximately 19 hours. This flight of SpaceXs Crew Dragon is only the fifth time in history that U.S. astronauts have piloted a brand-new spacecraft into orbit.
For the first time since NASA retired its space shuttles in 2011, the space agency can launch astronauts from its home shores rather than paying for seats aboard Russian spacecraft. Now, NASA will buy seats on Crew Dragon. In the new Commercial Crew model, SpaceX retains ownership and operational control of its spacecraft, meaning anyone with enough cash, at least in theory, could buy a ticket to orbit.
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