NASA and the Private Sector - Page 236
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LONG BEACH, Calif. — May 10, 2023 — Vast, a pioneer in space habitation technologies, announced today their plans to launch the world’s first commercial space station, called Haven-1. Scheduled to launch on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket to low-Earth orbit no earlier than August 2025, Haven-1 will initially act as an independent crewed space station prior to being connected as a module to a larger Vast space station currently in development. The mission will be quickly followed by Vast-1, the first human spaceflight mission to Haven-1 on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. The vehicle and its four-person crew will dock with Haven-1 for up to 30 days while orbiting Earth. Vast also secured an option with SpaceX for an additional human spaceflight mission to Haven-1. This represents the first time in history that a commercial space station company has both a contracted launch for its space station and a visiting human spaceflight mission. “Vast is thrilled to embark on this journey of launching the world's first commercial space station, Haven-1, and its first crew, Vast-1,” said Jed McCaleb, CEO of Vast. “We are grateful to SpaceX for this exciting partnership that represents the first steps in Vast’s long-term vision of launching much larger, artificial gravity space stations in Earth orbit and beyond.” “A commercial rocket launching a commercial spacecraft with commercial astronauts to a commercial space station is the future of low-Earth orbit, and with Vast we’re taking another step toward making that future a reality,” said Tom Ochinero, Senior Vice President of Commercial Business at SpaceX. “The SpaceX team couldn’t be more excited to launch Vast’s Haven-1 and support their follow-on human spaceflight missions to the orbiting commercial space station.” Vast’s long-term goal is to develop a 100-meter-long multi-module spinning artificial gravity space station launched by SpaceX’s Starship transportation system. In support of this, Vast will explore conducting the world’s first spinning artificial gravity experiment on a commercial space station with Haven-1. Vast is selling up to four crewed seats on the inaugural mission to Haven-1. Expected customers include domestic and international space agencies and private individuals involved in science and philanthropic projects. Visit vastspace.com/reserve for more details. SpaceX will also provide crew training on Falcon 9 and the Dragon spacecraft, emergency preparedness, spacesuit and spacecraft ingress and egress exercises, as well as partial and full mission simulations including docking and undocking with Haven-1 for return to Earth. Source | ||
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Kathy Lueders, the most recent top human spaceflight official at NASA, has joined Elon Musk’s SpaceX after retiring from the agency a couple of weeks ago, CNBC has learned. Lueders’ role will be general manager, and she will work out of the company’s “Starbase” facility in Texas, reporting directly to SpaceX president and COO Gwynne Shotwell, people familiar with the matter told CNBC. It’s a key hire for SpaceX as the company aims to make its massive Starship rocket safe to fly people in the coming years. Lueders, a respected expert in the sector, is already familiar with the company’s human spaceflight work to date. SpaceX did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Lueders’ hiring. Lueders retired from NASA at the end of April, following a 31-year career with the agency. Before leading NASA’s human spaceflight program, she oversaw the culmination of its Commercial Crew program as manager, including the first SpaceX missions to carry NASA astronauts. Earlier this year and shortly before she retired, SpaceX completed its sixth operational NASA crew launch — completing its initial contract for the agency. The company has received additional awards for eight more crewed missions. Notably, Lueders follows in the footsteps of one of her recent NASA predecessors, William Gerstenmaier, who joined SpaceX in 2020 after more than a decade as the agency’s top human spaceflight official. Gerstenmaier is now SpaceX’s vice president of build and flight reliability. Source | ||
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On May 22 2023 04:18 {CC}StealthBlue wrote: Axiom 2 crewed mission. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ekFE2RxBMI Will have to check it tomorrow. 2h remaining. | ||
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On May 26 2023 06:57 {CC}StealthBlue wrote: And Virgin Galactic has released video of the flight. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8w2yqgLrAs How long are these supposed to be again? 5 minutes? | ||
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On May 26 2023 07:51 ZerOCoolSC2 wrote: How long are these supposed to be again? 5 minutes? I know the Branson flight they experienced 3 minutes of weightlessness. Meanwhile at Boeing.... "battery sidewall rupture" does not sound like a very safe/good event to occur. | ||
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On May 26 2023 09:14 {CC}StealthBlue wrote: I know the Branson flight they experienced 3 minutes of weightlessness. Meanwhile at Boeing.... https://twitter.com/joroulette/status/1661852032968392712 "battery sidewall rupture" does not sound like a very safe/good event to occur. 450k for 3 minutes of weightlessness. I'd rather drop 1.5mil for a 3 day stay. At this point, it's almost a farce. Ground anything Starliner and BO until they do like 5 years of pure safety verification. Treat them the same as SpaceX and make them do an insane amount of testing. (I blame Musk for fucking this up. If he'd just keep his mouth shut 90% of the time, SpaceX would be the lead on most crewed launches, no?) | ||
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https://www.reddit.com/r/space/comments/13rtxua/pad_tracking_and_onboard_camera_views_of_south/ | ||
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