SpaceX Launches Polaris Dawn - First Commercial Spacewalk Crew
Polaris Dawn is a crew mission aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon Spacecraft. The Polaris Dawn crew (Commander Jared Isaacman, Pilot Scott Poteet, and Mission Specialists Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon) will spend up to five days in orbit, flying higher than any Dragon mission to date and will attempt to reach the highest Earth orbit flown since the Apollo program. The Polaris Dawn crew will support scientific research designed to advance both human health on Earth and our understanding of human health during future long-duration spaceflight, be the first to test Starlink laser-based communications in space, and will attempt the first spacewalk from any Commercial Spacecraft.
Please consider donating to St. Jude in honor of this mission:
Window Opens: September 10th at 3:33AM EDT (07:33 UTC)
Window Closes: September 10th at 09:01AM EDT (13:01 UTC)
First T0: September 10th at 3:38AM EDT (07:38 UTC)
Second T0: September 10th at 5:23AM EDT (09:23 UTC)
Third T0: September 10th at 7:09AM EDT (11:09 UTC)
Mission: F9 launch of Polaris Dawn with Crew Dragon Resilience to low-Earth Orbit
Launch location: Launch Complex 39A, Kennedy Space Center, Earth.
Target orbit: Low Earth Orbit, 190x1200km 51.6 degree inclination orbit
Booster: B1083-4; 124d 12h 56min turnaround
Booster history: Crew-8, Starlink Group 6-48, Starlink Group 6-56.
Booster recovery: Just Read The Instructions (JRTI)
Capsule: C207-3 (Resilience); 1087d 8h 31min 11s turnaround
Capsule history: Crew-1, Inspiration4
Capsule recovery: Megan or Shannon
Rocket trajectory: Northeast hugging the east coast of the United States
Stubby nozzle: NO
Mission Commander: Jared Isaacman (United States) - 2nd spaceflight
Mission Pilot: Scott Poteet (United States) - 1st spaceflight
Mission Specialist: Sarah Gillis (United States) - 1st spaceflight
Medical Officer: Anna Menon (United States) - 1st spaceflight
Stats:
· SpaceX’s 90th launch of the year and the 3rd launch of the month
· 18th Falcon orbital launch since the last failure, F9’s 371st orbital flight.
· SpaceX’s 89th launch from LC-39A
· 91st landing on JRTI out of 92 attempts
· 5th successful landing since the last failed one
· 45th orbital flight of a Dragon spacecraft and 14th human spaceflight by SpaceX
· This mission will bring up to 54 the total of people sent by SpaceX to orbit.
⚡ Become a member of NASASpaceflight’s channel for exclusive discord access, fast turnaround clips, and other exclusive benefits. Your support helps us continue our 24/7 coverage. ⚡
🔍 If you are interested in using footage captured by this stream, please review our content use policy:
27 views
3
1
6 months ago 00:53:21 1
Starship Flight Test
6 months ago 00:00:00 1
SpaceX Falcon 9 launched Axiom Space’s Axiom Mission 2 (Ax-2) to the ISS - Highlights