【】
It's been a momentous Saturday for SpaceX, and for the future of crewed voyages into space.
At 2:49 a.m. ET, the American aerospace company founded by Elon Musk staged its first launch of Crew Dragon. It's big news because this is the first time a commercial interest has launched a spacecraft that was built to carry humans.
Tweet may have been deletedSEE ALSO:SpaceX launches moon lander, lands booster despite tough conditions
American spaceflight has traditionally been the domain of NASA, but the past decade has seen a gradual shift toward having commercial interests share the responsibility. SpaceX and Boeing are leading that charge, so the successful Crew Dragon launch represents a major milestone moment.
It's still just a first step, however. Although the Dragon capsule itself is designed to carry a crew of up to seven astronauts skyward, the one that launched on Saturday -- Demo-1 is its designation -- is more of a test run: it's carrying a few hundred pounds of cargo, plus a sensor-filled dummy named "Ripley."

NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine hailed the launch as a "new era in spaceflight."
Tweet may have been deleted
He added: "We are looking forward to being one customer of many customers in a robust commercial marketplace in low-Earth orbit, so we can drive down costs and increase access in ways that, historically, have not been possible."
The cost savings Bridenstine mentioned are very real. After NASA retired its shuttle fleet in 2011, the U.S. has relied on Russia to bring astronauts to and from the International Space Station. Hitching a ride on a Russian Soyuz rocket costs roughly $80 million per seat, compared to the $51 million cost to fly on a SpaceX or Boeing vehicle.
Bridenstine's comments don't make it very clear, but NASA is closely involved with the U.S. development of commercial spaceflight. The agency's influence shapes various aspects of third-party planning, including design, safety, and funding, under its Commercial Crew Program.
Now that Demo-1 is in space, the next phase of its mission begins. Early on Sunday morning, the capsule will dock with the ISS to drop off its cargo. After that, Demo-1 will detach and begin its return trip to Earth.
Assuming everything goes well for Demo-1, the first Crew Dragon launch to carry actual humans into space could come as soon as summer 2019.
Featured Video For You
This space harpoon could be a solution to our growing space junk problem
TopicsSpaceX
相关文章

Australian football makes history with first LGBT Pride Game
The rainbow flag took over Melbourne's Etihad Stadium Saturday night in a powerful statement of acce2025-12-18
Genre films to put their stamp on the Toronto International Film Festival
TORONTO -- The Toronto International Film Festival kicked off on Thursday but, to be honest, it feel2025-12-18
Beyoncé celebrated her 35th birthday with a 'Soul Train' bash
Our one and only Queen Beyoncé is now another year older, and to celebrate, she took it back2025-12-18
11 moments we're dying to see in 'Muriel's Wedding The Musical'
1994 cult classic and easily one of the best Australian films of all time (yep, we're calling it), M2025-12-18
How Hyperloop One went off the rails
In December 2014, an engineer with the unlikely name Brogan BamBrogan was in the driveway of his cla2025-12-18
Kaepernick jersey sales skyrocket following controversy
Colin Kaepernick struck a chord when he sat in protest during the singing of the national anthem bef2025-12-18


最新评论