SpaceX's newly launched capsule with four astronauts closed in
Monday on the International Space Station, their new home until spring.
SpaceX's newly
launched capsule with four astronauts closed in Monday on the International
Space Station, their new home until spring.
The Dragon capsule was due at the orbiting lab late Monday night, following a
27-hour, completely automated flight from NASA's
Kennedy Space Center.
This is the second
astronaut mission for SpaceX. But it's the first time Elon Musk's company is
delivering a crew for a full half-year station stay. The two-pilot test flight
earlier this year lasted two months.
The three
Americans and one Japanese astronaut will remain at the orbiting lab until
their replacements arrive on another Dragon in April. And so it will go, with SpaceX
and eventually Boeing transporting astronauts to and from the station for NASA.
This regular taxi
service got underway with Sunday night's launch.
Commander Mike
Hopkins and his crew Victor Glover, Shannon Walker and Japan's Soichi Noguchi
will join two Russians and one American who flew to the space station last
month from Kazakhstan. Glover will be the first African-American to move in for
a long haul. A first-time flyer, Glover was presented his gold astronaut pin
Monday.
The four named
their capsule Resilience to provide hope and inspiration during an especially
difficult year for the whole world. They broadcast a tour of their capsule
Monday, showing off the touchscreen controls and storage areas.
Walker said it was
a little tighter for them than for the two astronauts on the test flight.
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