This was the first regular use of a Crew Dragon capsule from the private space company SpaceX by Tesla founder Elon Musk (49). US space travelers Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker, and their Japanese colleague Soishi Noguchi landed safely on Sunday morning (CET) in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida, USA. This was announced by the US space agency NASA.
Space travelers had previously been stationed on the International Space Station (ISS) for six months. The capsule was now disassembled from the International Space Station during the night after the return flight to Earth was delayed by one day due to bad weather. The ship, called “Crew-1”, docked at the International Space Station in November.
It got tight on the International Space Station
Things have been tight lately on the space station: In addition to Crew-1, astronauts Oleg Nowizki, Pyotr Dubrow and NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei have been on board since early April. Last weekend, four Crew-2 astronauts joined the team – US astronauts Shane Kembrah and Megan MacArthur as well as their Japanese teammates Akihiko Hoshid and Frenchman Thomas Pesquet.
Crew-1 was the first to regularly fly to the Crew Dragon’s International Space Station after a successful manned test flight to the ISS last spring. After a hiatus of nearly nine years, the test was the first in which astronauts had returned to orbit from American soil – and the first time ever that they had been promoted by a private space company. Crew-3 is currently scheduled to start in October. (SDA / noo)
Publication date: May 2, 2021, 2:29 pm
Last update: May 2, 2021, 2:42 PM
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