Delayed a day by bad weather, Sunday's launch from Kennedy Space Center brought together hundreds of SpaceX, NASA and Air Force employees on land, at sea and in the air.
BS
: SpaceX completed the last big test of its crew capsule before
launching astronauts in as little as two months, mimicking an
emergency escape shortly after liftoff Sunday.
No
one was aboard for the wild ride in the skies above Cape Canaveral,
just two mannequins.
A
Falcon 9 rocket blasted off as normal, but just over a minute into
its supersonic flight, the Dragon crew capsule catapulted off the top
12 miles (20 kilometers) above the Atlantic.
Powerful
thrusters on the capsule propelled it up and out of harm's way, as
the rocket engines deliberately shut down and the booster tumbled out
of control in a fiery flash.
The
capsule reached an altitude of about 27 miles (44 kilometers) before
parachuting into the ocean just offshore to bring the nine-minute
test flight to a close and pave the way for two NASA
astronauts to climb aboard next time.
SpaceX
flight controllers at the company's California headquarters cheered
every milestone especially the splashdown. Everything appeared to go
well despite the choppy seas.
Recycled
from three previous launches, the SpaceX
rocket was destroyed as it crashed into the sea in pieces. The
company founded and led by Elon Musk normally recovers its boosters,
landing them upright on a floating platform or back at the launch
site.
"That's
the main objective of this test, is to show that we can carry the
astronauts safely away from the rocket in case anything's going
wrong," said SpaceX's Benji Reed, director of crew mission
management.
"This
test is very important to us ... a huge practice session," Reed
added.
NASA's
commercial crew program manager, Kathy Lueders, said the launch abort
test was "our last open milestone" before allowing SpaceX
to launch Doug Hurley and Robert Behnken to the International Space
Station.
She
said that could happen as soon as March.
"We
are purposely failing a launch vehicle to make sure that our abort
system on the spacecraft, that will be flying for our crews, works,"
Lueders said in advance of the demo.
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