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SpaceX Rocket Set To Liftoff With Crew Of Four, Including Russian Cosmonaut

SpaceX is set to launch a crew of four astronauts for NASA to the International Space Station.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>SpaceX Rocket Set to Liftoff with Crew of Four, Including Russian Cosmonaut (Source:&nbsp;<a href="https://unsplash.com/@unarchive?utm_source=unsplash&amp;utm_medium=referral&amp;utm_content=creditCopyText">Jeremy Bezanger</a>&nbsp;/<a href="https://unsplash.com/s/photos/spacex?utm_source=unsplash&amp;utm_medium=referral&amp;utm_content=creditCopyText">Unsplash</a>)</p></div>
SpaceX Rocket Set to Liftoff with Crew of Four, Including Russian Cosmonaut (Source: Jeremy Bezanger /Unsplash)

SpaceX is set to launch a crew of four astronauts for NASA to the International Space Station, including a Russian cosmonaut and the first Native American woman to travel to space. 

The blast-off is targeted for noon local time Wednesday from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and follows a series of delays that have pushed back the launch by several weeks. The astronauts will travel on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon -- the sixth time NASA has relied on Elon Musk’s company to transport NASA personnel and international partners to the space station since Dragon’s inaugural crewed mission in May of 2020.

The multinational crew’s arrival at the station will begin a six-month-long stay in orbit. They include two NASA astronauts: Josh Cassada and Nicole Mann, a member of one of the Round Valley Indian Tribes in California. Joining the Americans will be Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, and Anna Kikina from Russia.

Kikina’s presence marks the first time a Russian cosmonaut will ride aboard a Dragon spacecraft. Since SpaceX began launching crews to the ISS, NASA and Russia’s state space corporation Roscosmos have been working together on a crew-swap agreement. That has continued even as relations have deteriorated in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

In July, NASA decried the actions of three Russian cosmonauts aboard the ISS, who posed for pictures with flags considered to be anti-Ukraine propaganda. But the two sides have pushed forward and on September 21, NASA astronaut Frank Rubio traveled to the ISS on a Russian Soyuz, along with two cosmonauts.

Adding drama to the timing of the launch are SpaceX Chief Executive Officer Musk’s tweets on Oct. 3 seeking a negotiated settlement between Ukraine and Russia. The unsolicited tweet outraged diplomats in Ukraine but isn’t expected to impact the launch or mission. 

Read More: Musk Sets Off Uproar in Ukraine by Tweeting His ‘Peace’ Plan 

The upcoming flight, called Crew-5, is the latest under a contract with NASA as part of the agency’s Commercial Crew Program. NASA has tapped SpaceX to fly up to 14 crewed missions to the ISS in a deal worth about $4.9 billion.

NASA’s second Commercial Crew provider, Boeing Co., has yet to fly people to space on its spacecraft, the CST-100 Starliner. Boeing is targeting February 2023 for its first crewed test flight to the ISS.

Crew-5 has taken longer than anticipated to get off the ground. In July, NASA pushed back the flight from early September to give SpaceX more time to repair hardware on the company’s Falcon 9 rocket for the mission. This particular rocket, which hasn’t been flown before, was damaged during transport when it collided with a bridge. 

The flight was delayed again last week as NASA’s Kennedy Space Center braced for Hurricane Ian. Hurricane Ian also forced NASA to rollback its massive Space Launch System moon rocket to its hangar, further slowing that rocket’s debut flight, a project unrelated to Wednesday’s ISS mission.

Once Crew-5 launches from Florida and reaches orbit, the Dragon plans to dock with the ISS on Thursday at 4:57 p.m. East Coast time. Astronauts now living on board the ISS, including those who launched to the station in April, intend to greet the new arrivals when the capsule’s hatch opens about one hour and 45 minutes later. 

The Crew-4 astronauts are slated to return back to Earth later this month in their own Dragon capsule which has been attached to the space station since their arrival.

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