INSIDER
Video: Sending off 2nd astronaut parent to space in 1 year, Megan McArthur’s son cheers mom on before launch
Read full article: Video: Sending off 2nd astronaut parent to space in 1 year, Megan McArthur’s son cheers mom on before launchHaving one astronaut for a parent would be pretty unique but for NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Bob Behnken, their son, Theo, has two.
NASA shifts next astronaut launch with SpaceX; Boeing Starliner test flight date TBD
Read full article: NASA shifts next astronaut launch with SpaceX; Boeing Starliner test flight date TBDNASA and SpaceX announced Thursday the launch date will move from April 20 to no earlier than Thursday, April 22. Also this week, Boeing and NASA announced they are evaluating a new launch date for the CST-100 Starliner spacecraft’s orbital test flight-2, or OFT-2. “Based on the current traffic at the space station, NASA does not anticipate that OFT-2 can be accomplished later in April. NASA and Boeing are working to find the earliest possible launch date,” the agency said. AdWhen it does launch, Starliner will dock at the ISS and return to Earth for its final test before NASA, hopefully, approves the spacecraft to fly astronauts.
Businessman buys SpaceX Crew Dragon trip to space, plans to take along 3 others
Read full article: Businessman buys SpaceX Crew Dragon trip to space, plans to take along 3 othersA 37-year-old businessman has bought four tickets to space with SpaceX and plans to take along three everyday people with him all while raising money for sick children. After the all-civilian spaceflight crew is announced, Isaacman plans to train with them, including some team bonding. “I am going to ensure that I introduce some very uncomfortable and stressful situations here on Earth long before we go up in space,” Isaacman said. Since NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley’s historic spaceflight, the Crew Dragon has now shuttled four other astronauts to the ISS with plans for two more astronaut launches this year for NASA and its international partners. Axios Space recently announced it has purchased a private spaceflight from SpaceX and four international businessmen will fly in Crew Dragon in early 2022.
Liftoff! SpaceX launches 4 astronauts on 6-month journey in space
Read full article: Liftoff! SpaceX launches 4 astronauts on 6-month journey in spaceThe Dragon spacecraft nicknamed Resilience will arrive at the International Space Station about 27 hours after launch, around 11 p.m. Monday. The Dragon spacecraft launch escape system is armed. 4:58 p.m. Space fans ready to watch Falcon 9 launchPeople in Titusville at Space View park came out to watch the SpaceX Falcon 9 launch with four astronauts from Kennedy Space Center on Nov. 15, 2020. SpaceX suit technicians known as SpaceX ninjas, wearing all black, helped the astronauts get into the Crew Dragon spacecraft and into their seats. “We are fully booked tomorrow, too.”She said without the Crew-1 launch and the earlier SpaceX launch in May, her B&B might not have survived.
Astronauts name Dragon spacecraft Resilience, prepare for November launch
Read full article: Astronauts name Dragon spacecraft Resilience, prepare for November launchBREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – The next astronauts to launch from Kennedy Space Center will begin their journey into space on the SpaceX Dragon capsule named Resilience. NASA said American astronauts Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker and Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi will catch a ride to the International Space Station aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft on a Falcon 9 rocket. They have been training to fly in the SpaceX Dragon spaceship together at the company’s headquarters in California. On Tuesday, Hopkins revealed the astronauts have named their spacecraft Resilience. The first Crew Dragon to launch humans was named Endeavour by its passengers, NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley.
Dragon spacecraft arrives back into Port Canaveral after historic splashdown
Read full article: Dragon spacecraft arrives back into Port Canaveral after historic splashdownPORT CANAVERAL, Fla. Looking a little toasty after a historic splashdown on the Gulf Coast, SpaceXs astronaut spacecraft will arrive back at Cape Canaveral on Friday afternoon. The Crew Dragon spacecraft nicknamed Endeavour is set to arrive by boat coming into Port Canaveral sometime around 5 p.m. News 6 will be there as the boat called Go Navigator makes its way into Port with the capsule. Behnken said next, before the parachutes deployed slowing the spacecraft from 350 mph to about 15 mph for splashdown, they could feel Crew Dragon maneuver itself for re-entry using its thrusters. Once the spacecraft is back at Cape Canaveral, the work begins to determine if NASA can issue the final flight certification for Dragon. Another astronaut crew, with three NASA astronauts and one Japanses astronaut, are set to launch on another Crew Dragon spacecraft in late September.
Gigabytes of data have to be examined before SpaceX mission is deemed a success
Read full article: Gigabytes of data have to be examined before SpaceX mission is deemed a successSpace travel is powered by data and lots of it. Space dads Bob and Doug are back from their historic journey, its time to let the data do the talking. CBS News space correspondent Bill Harwood said all the info now has to be analyzed before we can declare Dragons mission a success. Its going to be a full-up mission to the international space station. Right now NASA has targeted late September for SpaceX's next crewed mission.
Astronauts: SpaceX Dragon capsule 'came alive' on descent
Read full article: Astronauts: SpaceX Dragon capsule 'came alive' on descentIn this frame grab from NASA TV video, astronauts Bob Behnken, left, and Doug Hurley wave during a news conference, Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020, in Houston. The two NASA astronauts returned to Earth on Sunday in a dramatic, retro-style splashdown carried out by Elon Musk's SpaceX company. (NASA TV via AP)
Astronauts: SpaceX Dragon capsule 'came alive' on descent
Read full article: Astronauts: SpaceX Dragon capsule 'came alive' on descentThe two NASA astronauts returned to Earth on Sunday in a dramatic, retro-style splashdown carried out by Elon Musk's SpaceX company. Two days after returning from the International Space Station, NASA’s Bob Behnken described in vivid detail their wild ride home. “Once we descended a little bit into the atmosphere, the Dragon really, it came alive,” Behnken said from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. SpaceX became the first private company to send astronauts into orbit with the May 30 liftoff from NASA's Kennedy Space Center, ending a nine-year launch drought from home soil for NASA astronauts. It was the first splashdown for NASA astronauts in 45 years.
NASA astronauts to talk about historic SpaceX splashdown
Read full article: NASA astronauts to talk about historic SpaceX splashdownNASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken will talk about their historic return home from the International Space Station on Tuesday for the first time since their SpaceX spacecraft splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico over the weekend. Hurley and Behnken launched on the SpaceX Dragon capsule, nicknamed Endeavour, from Kennedy Space Center on May 30, arriving on the International Space Station the next day. After more than two months in space, the duo journeyed back to Earth in the SpaceX spacecraft in about 19 hours. It was the first spacecraft splashdown in 45 years. The launch, docking and splashdown marked the final test flight for SpaceXs astronaut capsule before NASA can issue a certification for regular flights for its astronauts.
Dragon returns: Re-watch the first astronaut splashdown in 45 years
Read full article: Dragon returns: Re-watch the first astronaut splashdown in 45 yearsSpaceX returned two NASA astronauts to Earth Sunday in a dramatic splashdown avoiding a tropical storm and safely returning the pair known as the “space dads” home. The splashdown marked the first by NASA astronauts in 45 years and the first with a commercial spacecraft. SpaceX Dragon capsule being pulled onto the Go Navigator recovery boat in the Gulf of Mexico on Aug. 2, 2020. Private vessels in the splashdown area were told to leave as they attempted to approach the SpaceX spacecraft. After being the last to leave the capsule, Hurley thanked everyone involved in the mission.
Welcome back to Earth, NASA astronauts splashdown in SpaceX Dragon capsule off Florida coast
Read full article: Welcome back to Earth, NASA astronauts splashdown in SpaceX Dragon capsule off Florida coast(Bill Ingalls/NASA via AP)NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken successfully returned to Earth for the first splashdown in 45 years Sunday in their SpaceX Dragon Endeavour spacecraft. The splashdown went as planned and landed into calm seas at 2:48 p.m.Welcome back to Earth and thanks for flying SpaceX, mission control told the astronauts. The milestone completed the SpaceX Demo-2 test mission for Dragon, the first test flight with astronauts to the International Space Station. Heres a timeline of the events prior to and after splashdown:1:51 p.m. Crew Dragon performs claw separation. 2:32 p.m. Crew Dragon maneuvers to attitude for re-entry: Dragon experiences significant heating and drag as it re-enters Earths atmosphere, which slows the velocity to the point of safe parachute deploy.
After private boaters beeline for SpaceX spacecraft landing site, NASA says more resources needed next time
Read full article: After private boaters beeline for SpaceX spacecraft landing site, NASA says more resources needed next timeThe astronaut pair were the first to launch on the SpaceX spacecraft from Kennedy Space Center on May 30 to the International Space Station, marking the first human spaceflight from U.S. soil since 2011. About a dozen private vessels in the splashdown area were told to leave as they attempted to approach the SpaceX spacecraft. Outside of those vessels Coast Guard boats should be the only other ones in the area for 10 miles. On Sunday, the private boats could be seen surrounding the recovery effort on the NASA livestream. The lesson learned here is we probably need more Coast Guard assets, maybe some more SpaceX and NASA assets as well, Shotwell said.
Astronauts face final leg of SpaceX test flight: coming home
Read full article: Astronauts face final leg of SpaceX test flight: coming homeIn this image from video made available by NASA, astronauts Doug Hurley, left, and Bob Behnken prepare for undocking from the International Space Station, aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule on Saturday, Aug. 1, 2020. (NASA via AP)
NASA astronauts aim for Florida coast to end SpaceX flight
Read full article: NASA astronauts aim for Florida coast to end SpaceX flightIn this image from video made available by NASA, astronauts Doug Hurley, left, and Bob Behnken prepare for undocking from the International Space Station, aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule on Saturday, Aug. 1, 2020. Space station commander Chris Cassidy rang the ship's bell as Dragon pulled away, 267 miles (430 kilometers) above Johannesburg, South Africa. The astronauts' homecoming will cap a mission that ended a prolonged launch drought in the U.S., which has relied on Russian rockets to ferry astronauts to the space station since the end of the shuttle era. The flag — which also flew on the first shuttle flight in 1981 — became a prize for the company that launched astronauts first. The next SpaceX crew flight is targeted for the end of September.
SpaceX Dragon capsule departs from space station with NASA astronauts on board
Read full article: SpaceX Dragon capsule departs from space station with NASA astronauts on boardSpace station commander Chris Cassidy rang the ship's bell as Dragon pulled away, 267 miles (430 kilometers) above Johannesburg, South Africa. "It's been a great two months, and we appreciate all you've done as a crew to help us prove out Dragon on its maiden flight, Hurley radioed to the space station. The astronauts' homecoming will cap a mission that ended a prolonged launch drought in the U.S., which has relied on Russian rockets to ferry astronauts to the space station since the end of the shuttle era. In launching Hurley and Behnken from NASA's Kennedy Space Center on May 30, SpaceX became the first private company to send people into orbit. The next SpaceX crew flight is targeted for the end of September.
US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsule
Read full article: US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsuleThis image made available by NASA astronaut Bob Behnken on Friday, July 31, 2020, shows him inside the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the International Space Station. SpaceX and NASA plan to bring Behnken and Doug Hurley back Sunday afternoon, aiming for splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just off the Florida Panhandle. (NASA via AP)
US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsule
Read full article: US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsuleThis image made available by NASA astronaut Bob Behnken on Friday, July 31, 2020, shows him inside the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the International Space Station. SpaceX and NASA plan to bring Behnken and Doug Hurley back Sunday afternoon, aiming for splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just off the Florida Panhandle. (NASA via AP)
US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsule
Read full article: US astronauts pack up for rare splashdown in SpaceX capsuleAstronauts returning in the early 1970s from Skylab, NASA’s first space station, did not feel well following splashdown, Hurley noted. Feeling sick “is the way it is with a water landing,” he said during the crew’s final news conference from the International Space Station. The capsule has been docked at the space station since May 31, allowing Hurley and Behnken to chip in with spacewalks and experiments. The plan is for the Dragon to undock from the space station on Saturday, a day before splashdown. “We won’t leave the space station without some good landing opportunities in front of us, good splashdown weather,” Behnken told reporters.
SpaceX faces potential tropical storm as it prepares to bring home NASA astronauts
Read full article: SpaceX faces potential tropical storm as it prepares to bring home NASA astronautsORLANDO, Fla. – Potential 60 mph wind gusts won’t bode well for a SpaceX spacecraft splashdown planned for this Sunday if the current track of a potential tropical storm holds but NASA officials say the plan to return the astronauts this weekend is still on. SpaceX and NASA teams will be looking at wind speed, wave height, rain, lightning and helicopter operational limits. Seven potential Crew Dragon landing sites. “The NASA team and the SpaceX team remain ‘go’ for return,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said opening up the media briefing after the FRR. NASA and SpaceX will make the final decision Saturday after the astronauts are inside the capsule just before undocking from the space station.
Pending weather, NASA astronauts still Go for Sunday splashdown in SpaceX Dragon Endeavour
Read full article: Pending weather, NASA astronauts still Go for Sunday splashdown in SpaceX Dragon EndeavourORLANDO, Fla. Two NASA astronauts are preparing to become the first to complete their spaceflight on SpaceXs new Dragon spacecraft nicknamed Endeavour but Hurricane Isaias may foil those plans. Unfazed by the weather woes, NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken told reporters Friday if their planned splashdown off Floridas coast in Dragon Endeavour gets delayed they have plenty of chow and work to do on the International Space Station. NASA and SpaceX officials said there are no issues following a flight readiness review earlier in the week. Theres more chow and I know the space station programs got more work that we can do for those (principal investigators) and other folks that have sent science up here to the space station, Behnken said. Behnkens wife NASA astronaut Megan McArthur will fly on the same Dragon Endeavour spacecraft next year.
Tropical storm may delay 1st SpaceX crew's return to Earth
Read full article: Tropical storm may delay 1st SpaceX crew's return to EarthOn Wednesday, July 29, 2020, SpaceX and NASA cleared the Dragon crew capsule to depart the International Space Station and head home after a two-month flight. (NASA via AP)CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Tropical weather barreling toward Florida could delay this weekends planned return of the first SpaceX crew. On Wednesday, SpaceX and NASA cleared the Dragon crew capsule to depart the International Space Station and head home after a two-month flight. SpaceX is already preparing to launch a second crew to the space station at the end of September. NASA wants six weeks between the splashdown and the launch of the next Dragon crew, for capsule inspections and reviews.
Astronauts squeeze in last spacewalk before SpaceX departure
Read full article: Astronauts squeeze in last spacewalk before SpaceX departureCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Astronauts squeezed in one last spacewalk Tuesday before turning their attention to the all-important end to SpaceXs first crew flight. NASAs Bob Behnken and Chris Cassidy floated out of the International Space Station on their fourth and final spacewalk in under a month. It was the 10th spacewalk in each of their careers, tying the U.S. record set by previous space station residents. SpaceX is aiming for a splashdown off the Florida coast in August the first splashdown for astronauts in 45 years. NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said once Tuesday's spacewalk is finished, the astronauts are going to be focused like a laser on coming home."
NASA targeting Aug. 2 for SpaceX Crew Dragon splashdown with astronauts
Read full article: NASA targeting Aug. 2 for SpaceX Crew Dragon splashdown with astronautsThey were the first to hitch a ride to the International Space Station on Falcon 9 and Crew Dragon. SpaceX and NASA are targeting September for the next launch of Dragon with astronauts from Kennedy Space Center. On Friday, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said SpaceX and NASA are targeting Aug. 1 for a departure of the Crew Dragon spacecraft, named Endeavour by its passengers, and a splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean on Aug. 2. NASA has paid the Russian space agency about $84 million a seat to fly its astronauts to and from the International Space Station. SpaceX and Boeing were selected in 2014 to develop American-made spacecraft to take over transporting NASA astronauts to space.
NASA astronauts head back out for more spacewalking work outside ISS
Read full article: NASA astronauts head back out for more spacewalking work outside ISSNASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Chris Cassidy are going back out into the vacuum of space Wednesday to perform more maintenance on the International Space Station. Watch: https://t.co/AcKX8sGOVD https://t.co/AcKX8sGOVD — NASA (@NASA) July 1, 2020During the prior first walk, the astronauts worked ahead of schedule completing some of the tasks planned for Wednesday. Spacewalking astronauts wear a wrist mirror on each sleeve to get better views while working. pic.twitter.com/vaAzbDWalw — NASA (@NASA) July 1, 2020“I just happened to glance down and I saw this reflecting thing disappearing into the darkness, and that was the last I saw of it,” Cassidy said in an interview with The Associated Press. The astronauts will be recognizable in the NASA TV feed by their spacesuits.
Astronaut says losing mirror on spacewalk was 'real bummer'
Read full article: Astronaut says losing mirror on spacewalk was 'real bummer'CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. The commander of the International Space Station said Monday that losing a mirror during last weeks otherwise successful spacewalk was a real bummer.NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy said he has no idea how the small mirror on his left sleeve came off. The band for the mirror is on pretty tight, he noted, and it may have caught on a metal tether attachment as he exited the airlock Friday. That was a real bummer for me.Hell use a spare for Wednesdays spacewalk, the second of four he and NASA astronaut Bob Behnken will do to replace old station batteries. Spacewalking astronauts wear a mirror on each sleeve to see the displays on their chest control panel. ___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Department of Science Education.
Spacewalking NASA astronauts make repairs outside space station
Read full article: Spacewalking NASA astronauts make repairs outside space stationTwo NASA astronauts did some home maintenance Friday on the orbiting laboratory 200 miles above Earth during a seven-hour spacewalk. Astronauts Bob Behnken and Chris Cassidy ventured out of the International Space Station Friday morning to install batteries outside the station. Once outside, the astronauts began work on one of two power channels on the far starboard truss of the station. https://t.co/SN3Y9zOMwr — NASA (@NASA) June 26, 2020As he stepped out of the ISS, Cassidy lost a small mirror on his spacesuit adding to the millions of pieces of junk orbiting the Earth. While millions of pieces of space debris orbit Earth, more than 20,000 items including old rocket parts and busted satellites are big enough to be tracked in order to safeguard the space station and functional satellites.
Spacewalking astronaut loses mirror, newest space junk
Read full article: Spacewalking astronaut loses mirror, newest space junkThis photo provided by NASA shows NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and NASA Flight Engineer Bob Behnken during a spacewalk outside the International Space Station on Friday, June 26, 2020. Cassidy and Behnken, are conducting the first of at least four spacewalks to replace the last bunch of old station batteries. (NASA via AP)
Spacewalking astronaut loses mirror, newest space junk
Read full article: Spacewalking astronaut loses mirror, newest space junkThis photo provided by NASA shows NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and NASA Flight Engineer Bob Behnken during a spacewalk outside the International Space Station on Friday, June 26, 2020. Cassidy and Behnken, are conducting the first of at least four spacewalks to replace the last bunch of old station batteries. (NASA via AP)CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – A spacewalking astronaut added to the millions of pieces of junk orbiting the Earth on Friday, losing a small mirror on his sleeve as soon as he emerged from the International Space Station for battery work. Cassidy and Bob Behnken hustled through the first of four planned spacewalks to replace the last bunch of old station batteries. The spacewalkers also paid tribute to NASA's space station program manager, Kirk Shireman, retiring Friday after 35 years to go into private industry.
NASA astronauts Bob Behnken, Chris Cassidy to perform spacewalks outside ISS
Read full article: NASA astronauts Bob Behnken, Chris Cassidy to perform spacewalks outside ISSCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley will take part in a set of spacewalks outside the International Space Station to begin replacing batteries for one of the ISS’ power channels, according to the space agency. The first of the two walks is set to begin around 7:35 a.m. on June 26, NASA officials said in a news release. Cassidy, the commander of Expedition 63, and Behnken, who joined the crew onboard the ISS last month after arriving on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon with veteran NASA astronaut Doug Hurley, will depart the Quest airlock for both spacewalks, NASA said on its website. As extravehicular crew member 1 for both spacewalks, Cassidy can be identified during the walks as the astronaut wearing the spacesuit with red stripes, NASA officials said. NASA officials said the walks will mark the seventh and eighth spacewalks for each astronaut and the 228th and 229th performed for space station assembly, maintenance and upgrades.
Falcon 9 booster used to launch NASA astronauts arrives at Port Canaveral
Read full article: Falcon 9 booster used to launch NASA astronauts arrives at Port CanaveralPORT CANAVERAL, Fla. – The SpaceX rocket booster used to launch NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley on their mission to the International Space Station, making history by being the first private rocket to do so, headed back into Port Canaveral Tuesday. The Falcon 9 rocket booster landed at sea on the droneship Of Course I Still Love You about 10 minutes after launching the Crew Dragon spacecraft into orbit Saturday afternoon. The SpaceX launch marked the first time a private company has launched humans to orbit and the first time Americans have launched from U.S. soil since 2011. The first stage is what returned to Port Canaveral Tuesday. [EXCLUSIVE: SpaceX CEO Elon Musk officially launched humans to space -- here’s what he’s planning next]Full Screen 1 / 9 The SpaceX Falcon 9 booster used to launch two NASA astronauts to orbit returns to Port Canaveral via droneship on June 2, 2020.
SpaceX captures the flag, beating Boeing in cosmic contest
Read full article: SpaceX captures the flag, beating Boeing in cosmic contestThe flag flew on the first space shuttle flight in 1981 and the final one in 2011. The flag was an added incentive for Elon Musk's SpaceX company and Boeing, competing to be the first private company to launch a crew to the space station. The crew will include Chris Ferguson, commander of the last shuttle flight who now works for Boeing. The Dragon capsule, also built and owned by SpaceX, docked at the space station Sunday. The capsule will serve as their lifeboat during their space station visit.
How the astronauts’ sons are coping with their dads in space
Read full article: How the astronauts’ sons are coping with their dads in spaceWhen NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley blasted off Saturday to the International Space Station, they waived goodbye to their wives and children, not knowing when they’ll return back to Earth. Both men are married to fellow astronauts and each have a young son at home waiting for them. Behnken’s son Theo is 6 while Hurley’s son, Jack, is 10. [EXCLUSIVE: SpaceX CEO Elon Musk officially launched humans to space -- here’s what he’s planning next]The veteran astronauts last launched in 2011, before Theo was born and when Jack was only 1 year old. “That was a super cool thing for us to get the chance to do for both of our sons,” Behnken said.
How Crew Dragon compares to flying on space shuttle from the first NASA astronauts to do both
Read full article: How Crew Dragon compares to flying on space shuttle from the first NASA astronauts to do bothAfter becoming the first NASA astronauts to launch from Florida in nine years, astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley are reflecting on how flying in their previous spaceship, the space shuttle compares to their new ride built by SpaceX’s the Crew Dragon spacecraft. (Image: Greg Scott) (WKMG 2020)Both Hurley and Behnken said launching on Falcon 9 was very different than the space shuttle. [MORE COVERAGE: Sparkling dinosaur makes journey with NASA astronauts to International Space Station]How’s the bathroom situation? Image above of space shuttle toilet on display at Johnson Space Center in Houston. On Sunday, the astronauts could see the bright light of Crew Dragon as it began to approach.
Sparkling dinosaur makes journey with NASA astronauts to International Space Station
Read full article: Sparkling dinosaur makes journey with NASA astronauts to International Space StationTwo NASA astronauts who arrived at the International Space Station Sunday morning in their new SpaceX spacecraft brought with them a reminder of their young sons who they will spend up to four months without seeing in person. NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken brought along a little stuffed dinosaur after the toy was selected by their 6 and 10-year-old sons to join them on the journey. Tremor was going to join Earthy, a plush globe delivered to the space station on last year’s test flight of a crew-less crew Dragon. "We plan once we get on board the space station to reunite Tremor with Earthy (and) plan to bring both of them back to Earth," Behnken said. NASA Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley brought along a stuffed dinosaur from their sons for their trip to the space station.
How is the bathroom on Crew Dragon? NASA astronauts finally able to answer
Read full article: How is the bathroom on Crew Dragon? NASA astronauts finally able to answerAfter launching from Kennedy Space Center Saturday, the astronauts had about 19 hours in the spacecraft before reaching their destination. Prior to launch, Hurley and Behnken said they didnt know how the restroom situation was because they didnt have the experience with it to say. [MORE COVERAGE: How Crew Dragon compares to flying on space shuttle from the first NASA astronauts to do both | How the astronauts sons are coping with their dads in space]Lets see the toilet. NASA: The toilet on the orbiting space station is even more antiquated ((Image: NASA))Its done just absolutely spectacularly, you know, its a very clean vehicle, Hurley said. The fascination with what the astronauts eat and the Dragon commode might speak to everyone because we all eat and we all, you know.
NASA astronauts arrive at International Space Station with help from new SpaceX ride
Read full article: NASA astronauts arrive at International Space Station with help from new SpaceX rideORLANDO, Fla. NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken approached their new temporary home in orbit Sunday morning after zipping around Earth to catch up to the International Space Station. Applause could be heard from SpaceXs mission control in Hawthorne when the hard capture of Crew Dragon at station was confirmed just before 10:30 a.m. Its been a real honor to be part of this nine year endeavour since the U.S. docked a spaceship at the International Space Station, Hurley said with a thumbs up, thanking NASA and SpaceX teams. Already on board station, NASA astronauts Chris Cassidy was keeping an eye on the new spaceship as it approached the orbiting laboratory. Behnken and Hurley will spend anywhere between one to four months on the International Space Station.
Wave to Bob and Doug! Heres when you can see the ISS over Central Florida
Read full article: Wave to Bob and Doug! Heres when you can see the ISS over Central FloridaAstronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley have joined American Chris Cassidy and two Russian cosmonauts on the International Space Station. Later on in the week youll have a chance to see the bright dot, also known as the ISS, zip across the night sky. Friday and Saturday will be the best times, weather permitting, to see the ISS flyover Central Florida. Saturday no doubt offers the best time to see the ISS pass by weather permitting. Saturday presents the best opportunity to see the ISS weather permitting.
UPDATE: SpaceX launches NASA astronauts from Kennedy Space Center
Read full article: UPDATE: SpaceX launches NASA astronauts from Kennedy Space CenterThe first attempt to launch NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley was scrubbed Wednesday due to weather. Veteran NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley are the lone passengers onboard the Crew Dragon spacecraft. As part of NASA’s commercial crew program, the U.S. space agency selected SpaceX and Boeing to develop spacecraft to fly NASA astronauts. Crew Dragon hatch closesSpaceX teams have closed the hatch to the Crew Dragon capsule at Launch Complex 39A. Webcast will go live at ~11:00 a.m. EDT → https://t.co/bJFjLCilmc pic.twitter.com/AXDGNfqv0K — SpaceX (@SpaceX) May 30, 20207:40 a.m.
Dragon-riding astronauts join exclusive inner circle at NASA
Read full article: Dragon-riding astronauts join exclusive inner circle at NASAIt will be the first astronaut launch from NASAs Kennedy Space Center since the last shuttle flight in 2011. (SpaceX via AP)CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken join NASA’s exclusive inner circle by catching a ride on a SpaceX rocket and capsule. Their destination is the International Space Station, where they’ll spend one to four months before guiding their capsule to a splashdown in the Atlantic. Wife Karen Nyberg, a former space station resident, retired two months ago from NASA. As joint operations commander, he'll oversee the Dragon’s rendezvous and docking with the International Space Station.
Launch America: Get a 360-view as SpaceX prepares to launch NASA astronauts
Read full article: Launch America: Get a 360-view as SpaceX prepares to launch NASA astronautsNews 6 is giving you a view of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon launch from just about every angle. Saturday is SpaceX’s second try as the private company and NASA work to usher in a new age of space travel with the Demo-2 launch. NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley are set to take off at 3:22 p.m., weather willing. [READ MORE | Live launch updates: SpaceX set to launch NASA astronauts on Crew Dragon | Timeline: Here’s what NASA astronauts are doing on launch day]If Behnken and Hurley take off, it will mark the first time in nine years NASA astronauts will lift off from the Space Coast. SpaceX and weather officers are also closely watching the launch forecast and conditions in the Atlantic Ocean for recovery conditions in case of a launch abort.
Return to Space: SpaceX launches astronauts into orbit, returning human spaceflight to Florida
Read full article: Return to Space: SpaceX launches astronauts into orbit, returning human spaceflight to FloridaSpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk celebrates inside the Kennedy Space Center Vehicle Assembly Building after his company successfully launched NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to orbit on May 30, 2020. Behnken and Hurley are veteran astronauts, with 1,400 spaceflight hours between them. During live commentary of the launch SpaceX engineer Lauren Lyons said the astronauts are known as the dads by their team. [MORE COVERAGE: NASA astronauts wave goodbye to families in 2nd attempt to launch SpaceX Crew Dragon]The launch marks the beginning of a new era in U.S. human spaceflight, one shouldered by NASA and commercial companies like SpaceX instead of by the American taxpayer alone. Welcome aboard the @SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft!
NASA astronauts wave goodbye to families in 2nd attempt to launch SpaceX Crew Dragon
Read full article: NASA astronauts wave goodbye to families in 2nd attempt to launch SpaceX Crew DragonHurley and Behnken are the test pilots tasked with flying to the International Space Station on SpaceXs Crew Dragon spacecraft. The families are familiar with a touching moment, as both Behnken and Hurley married former astronauts who have each have had their own rendezvous with space. pic.twitter.com/QjxLLZrCgm NASA (@NASA) May 30, 2020Behnken is married to astronaut Megan McArthur. After their heartfelt goodbye, the astronauts drove off in the backseat of a Tesla to board SpaceXs Crew Dragon space capsule. Once the rocket lifts off, Crew Dragon will take 19 hours to fly to the International Space Station.
Timeline: Heres what NASA astronauts are doing on launch day
Read full article: Timeline: Heres what NASA astronauts are doing on launch dayBefore launch and the 19-hour journey to the International Space Station once in orbit, NASA Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley have a long day of getting ready for their spaceflight. Heres a timeline of what the astronauts will be doing on launch day:8 a.m. According to Kennedy Space Center Director Bob Cabana the astronauts can request anything they want on launch day. [ASTRONAUTS WAITING ON RIDE: Heres what NASA astronauts are doing between launch attempts]12:07 p.m. The Crew Dragon launch escape system is armed, this would send the capsule away if there is a problem at any point prior to launch.
How to watch the historic astronaut launch with your children: There’s an invaluable lesson here
Read full article: How to watch the historic astronaut launch with your children: There’s an invaluable lesson hereIf it goes off as planned, this will mark the first mission involving astronauts from U.S. soil since 2011. Still, NASA astronaut Bob Behnken has said he and Doug Hurley are “really comfortable” with the risks. So you’re making educated guesses, at best.”It seems there’s just more uncharted territory when it comes to space travel. “The first astronauts really started out as test pilots,” Garfinkle said. But assuming this launch goes well, “It would be great for kids to see a successful, triumphant moment of science,” Fink said.
Where to watch SpaceX Crew Dragon launch on the Space Coast
Read full article: Where to watch SpaceX Crew Dragon launch on the Space CoastRead more about the variety of launch viewing hot spots, known to locals and space enthusiasts alike, then click through the map embedded in the story to learn more. Due to the launch, the bridge will be closed to vehicle traffic one hour after the launch. Titusville parksLaunch spectators have staked out their spots below the Max Brewer Bridge in Titusville. (WKMG)In Titusville, 15 miles across the Indian River, almost parallel to multiple launch pads are two Brevard County parks popular to locals for launch viewing. Titusvilles Parrish Park is a 36-acre park on both sides of the A. Max Brewer Causeway off State Road 402.
Watch the moment NASA astronauts climb into SpaceX’s Crew Dragon
Read full article: Watch the moment NASA astronauts climb into SpaceX’s Crew DragonBREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – Despite inclement weather in Brevard County, NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley arrived to Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39A suited up and ready for lift-off. The two boarded SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule around 1:45 p.m. Wednesday afternoon, about three hours before the Falcon 9 was scheduled to launch. Behnken and Hurley are the two test pilots tasked with landing the Crew Dragon capsule on the International Space Station. The mission marking the first time the space agency is collaborating with a private company to send humans into orbit. Wednesday’s launch was scrubbed moments before lift-off, so it will be take two for Behnken and Hurley Saturday.
Astronauts say good-bye to families in touching moment
Read full article: Astronauts say good-bye to families in touching momentORLANDO, Fla. – Returning human spaceflight to the U.S. is monumental for all involved, but particularly touching for the families waving goodbye to NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley. Before the two astronauts drove off to Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39A, their preparations for lift-off included a heartfelt moment. She was part of the final repair mission for the Hubble Space Telescope and has flown on one space shuttle mission. Astronauts say good-bye to families in touching moment (Copyright 2020 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.) After their heartfelt goodbye, the astronauts drove off in Teslas board SpaceX’s Crew Dragon space capsule.
Here’s what SpaceX astronauts listened to on their way to the launch pad
Read full article: Here’s what SpaceX astronauts listened to on their way to the launch padVeteran NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley are the lone passengers who will be on board the Crew Dragon spacecraft. You don’t have to be a NASA aficionado to know that this launch from NASA’s KSC will be history-making. For starters, this is the first time astronauts will be launched into space from American soil since 2011. Behnken and Hurly created their own playlist for their 3-mile ride out to Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39A and it consisted of three well-known songs. pic.twitter.com/YHQ2kUFYST — NASA (@NASA) May 27, 2020AC/DC - Back In BlackThis song is more than fitting considering Hurley and Benken are veteran astronauts.
Experience SpaceX’s historic launch in 360 degrees
Read full article: Experience SpaceX’s historic launch in 360 degreesWednesday will usher in a new age of space travel as SpaceX’s Demo-2 launch with NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley takes off. MORE: Live launch day updates: SpaceX prepares to launch NASA astronauts from Kennedy Space CenterThe launch is scheduled for 4:33 p.m. and there are many ways to watch. Take a look around, listen in to the spectators joining you and experience the thrill of the space coast as it does what it does best -- launch rockets. Weather officers with the 45th Weather Squadron have reduced the chances of good launch conditions to 50% and that is only the launch forecast. SpaceX and weather officers are also closely watching conditions in the Atlantic Ocean for recovery conditions in case of a launch abort.
Behnken, Hurley make ‘very great crew,' former NASA astronaut says
Read full article: Behnken, Hurley make ‘very great crew,' former NASA astronaut saysKENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. – Fellow Space Shuttle veteran Garrett Reisman knows how Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley may be feeling on the eve of launch day. Fearless is how the first SpaceX Crew Dragon crew have appeared in the week since they arrived at Kennedy Space Center. That was seven years after Hurley was onboard the final shuttle mission, Space Shuttle Atlantis. I think they make a very great crew,” Reisman said. Like Behnken and Hurley, Reisman has also been to space twice, one of those times on a shuttle with Behnken.
Calm under pressure: 2 NASA astronauts prepare to return glory of human spaceflight to America
Read full article: Calm under pressure: 2 NASA astronauts prepare to return glory of human spaceflight to AmericaHe later became an Air Force test pilot and served as the lead flight test engineer for the 4th F-22. Like Hurley, Behnken was also part of the 2000 NASA astronaut class, where he met his now wife NASA astronaut Megan McArthur. “It’s almost like a home away from home, its great to be back.”[MORE COVERAGE: Forecast for SpaceX’s first astronaut launch aligns with typical wet Florida afternoon | America’s first astronaut launch in 9 years: How did we get here?] The pair have trained extensively at SpaceX’s headquarters in Hawthorne, California and at NASA’s John Space Center to prepare for the Demo-2 test flight. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)A week ahead of the historic launch, Hurley said he was excited to put all that training toward testing Crew Dragon on its first spaceflight.
NASA astronauts go back to the future with capsule launch
Read full article: NASA astronauts go back to the future with capsule launch(SpaceX via AP)CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – It’s back to the future as NASA astronauts launch again from the U.S. — aboard a retro-style “Right Stuff” capsule. SpaceX’s Dragon crew capsule outshines NASA’s old Apollo spacecraft in virtually every way. This fresh take on a vintage look will be on full display Wednesday when SpaceX plans to launch NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken to the International Space Station — a first for a private company. Russia’s workhorse Soyuz capsules, still in use after a half-century plus, have kept NASA astronauts flying to the space station. A test dummy soloed on last year’s Dragon crew capsule debut.
SpaceX’s 1st astronaut launch breaking new ground for style
Read full article: SpaceX’s 1st astronaut launch breaking new ground for styleIt will be the first astronaut launch from NASAs Kennedy Space Center since the last shuttle flight in 2011. They'll catch a ride to the launch pad in a Tesla Model X electric car. It will be the first astronaut launch from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center since the last shuttle flight in 2011. The worm adorns the Astro-Tesla, Falcon and even the astronauts' suits, along with NASA’s original blue meatball-shaped logo. The white-suited Hurley and Behnken will transfer from the white Tesla to the white Dragon atop the equally white Falcon 9.
SpaceX’s 1st astronaut launch breaking new ground for style
Read full article: SpaceX’s 1st astronaut launch breaking new ground for styleCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The first astronauts launched by SpaceX are breaking new ground for style with hip spacesuits, gull-wing Teslas and a sleek rocketship — all of it white with black trim. They'll catch a ride to the launch pad in a Tesla Model X electric car. It will be the first astronaut launch from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center since the last shuttle flight in 2011. The worm adorns the Astro-Tesla, Falcon and even the astronauts' suits, along with NASA’s original blue meatball-shaped logo. The white-suited Hurley and Behnken will transfer from the white Tesla to the white Dragon atop the equally white Falcon 9.
NASA's newest test pilots are veteran astronauts, friends
Read full article: NASA's newest test pilots are veteran astronauts, friends(SpaceX via AP)CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The two astronauts who will test drive SpaceX’s brand new rocketship are classmates and friends, veteran spacefliers married to veteran spacefliers, and fathers of young sons. Retired Marine Col. Doug Hurley will be in charge of launch and landing, a fitting assignment for the pilot of NASA’s last space shuttle flight. Hurley, 53, and Behnken, 49, are NASA’s first test pilot crew in decades. Crippen and the late John Young rode NASA’s first space shuttle, Columbia, into orbit on April 12, 1981. Hurley and Behnken — both two-time space shuttle fliers — were among four astronauts chosen in 2015 for NASA’s commercial crew program.
Chance of weather scrub on Crew Dragon astronaut launch day ‘very high,’ SpaceX officials say
Read full article: Chance of weather scrub on Crew Dragon astronaut launch day ‘very high,’ SpaceX officials sayHowever, on May 27, with two astronauts on board the Crew Dragon capsule, sea state will be critical again for the first time in 9 years. Crew Dragon can only touch down in water, at the end of the mission but also anytime in case of a mission abort. NASA's Crew Dragon weather launch criteria calls for a no-go "if downrange weather indicates violation of limits at splashdown in case of Dragon launch escape" and "if downrange weather shows high probability of violating limits at splashdown in case of Dragon launch escape." [RELATED: Here are 14 weather reasons SpaceX would not launch the Falcon 9 Crew Dragon]“I would expect there to be a very high chance of scrub due to the weather,” Reed said. NASA echoes that in its launch weather criteria: "Probability of violation is calculated for each location including limit conditions for wind, waves, lightning, and precipitation."
Astronauts arrive for NASA's 1st home launch in decade
Read full article: Astronauts arrive for NASA's 1st home launch in decadeA SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket scheduled for May 27 will launch a Crew Dragon spacecraft on its first test flight with astronauts on-board to the International Space Station. The two are scheduled to blast off next Wednesday afternoon atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, bound for the International Space Station. They'll soar from the same pad where Atlantis closed out the shuttle program in 2011, the last home launch for NASA astronauts. Since then, the only way to the space station for astronauts has been on Russian rockets launched from Kazakhstan. Hurley and Behnken still don’t know how long they’ll spend at the space station: anywhere between one and four months.
SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft arrives in Florida ahead of first astronaut flight
Read full article: SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft arrives in Florida ahead of first astronaut flightCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The first SpaceX spacecraft to carry humans arrived at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center Friday ahead of its historic flight later this year. NASA Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley will be on the first ever crewed flight of a Crew Dragon atop a Falcon 9 rocket launching from Launchpad 39A at KSC. [RELATED: Video shows what NASA astronauts will experience during SpaceX’s Crew Dragon launch]The launch, expected in the first half of 2020, will mark the first time humans have launched from U.S. soil since 2011. On Friday, NASA initially declared SpaceX the unofficial winner calling the Crew Dragon the first to fly humans ahead of NASA’s other commercial crew partner, Boeing. NASA later deleted that tweet and updated its news release to remove that phrase.