Author Topic: SpaceX prepares for an active month -Initiates with Starlink followed by the First Crewed Flight  (Read 393 times)

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TESMANIAN by Evelyn Arevalo May 08, 2020

SpaceX prepares for an active rocket launch manifest this month. It all initiates with a deployment of another cluster of Starlink satellites next week, on May 18th, followed by SpaceX’s first manned flight scheduled for May 27th. The mission is set make history because the United States has not launched astronauts aboard American-made spacecraft from American soil since 2011, when the Space Shuttle fleet was grounded. SpaceX will return human spaceflight capabilities to NASA after nearly a decade!

Offering Starlink broadband internet globally is SpaceX’s plan to further fund its space program. Starlink customers would be supporting future missions to the moon and Mars. As of today, about 420 Starlink satellites are orbiting Earth. SpaceX will conduct its eighth Starlink mission on May 18th at 3:09 a.m. Eastern Time. A previously-flown Falcon 9 rocket will deploy another batch of 60 internet-beaming satellites into low Earth orbit, from Launch Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. It will be the rocket’s first-stage fifth flight. The company’s goal is to fly a particular rocket booster ten times. Rocket reusability is a huge achievement by SpaceX. To recover rockets, engineers developed Falcon 9 with the capability to return from space to conduct a vertical landing on autonomous drone ships at sea. During next week’s Starlink-7 mission, SpaceX will attempt to recover Falcon 9’s first-stage booster a fifth time by landing it on the Of Course I Still Love You drone ship.

Approximately ten days after deploying Starlink, SpaceX will conduct its most important mission –launching humans to orbit. SpaceX’s first crewed flight is referred to Demo-2, it is really a demonstration mission to assess if the Crew Dragon spacecraft can safely and reliably launch NASA Astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS). The two astronauts who will launch aboard Crew Dragon are NASA Astronaut Robert Behnken and Astronauts Douglas Hurley. Both, are veteran pilots and have previously conducted two Space Shuttle flights to the orbiting laboratory. Over the course of around six years, Behnken and Hurley have worked with SpaceX to design a spacecraft that will fit astronauts needs in space. As pilots, they offered great insight towards developing software and hardware that could reliably be used in flight.

More: https://www.tesmanian.com/blogs/tesmanian-blog/starlink-dm2