SpaceX launch: Polaris Dawn crew looks to make history with civilian spacewalk
A SpaceX Dragon carrying the four members of the Polaris Dawn crew is zooming into the upper reaches of Earth's orbit, where it should reach higher than any human has traveled in decades.
Launching early Tuesday atop a Falcon 9 rocket, the spacecraft will ascend to 870 miles above Earth's surface before descending to a cruising orbit about 435 miles up. On board the craft is an all-civilian crew under the command of billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman.
Isaacman, who was also behind Inspiration4 – another historic commercial mission in 2021 that marked the first time an all-civilian crew went to space – helped fund the mission along with SpaceX. Elon Musk's aerospace company also designed spacesuits for the Polaris Dawn crew.
The highly anticipated launch followed about two weeks of delays as SpaceX awaited the ideal launch opportunity. During the ambitious mission, Isaacman and his crew hope to conduct the first-ever spacewalk by anyone other than government astronauts while testing out SpaceX tech that could set the stage for future deep space exploration.
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Rewatch Polaris Dawn launch: Video shows a SpaceX rocket launch 4-member crew for daring commercial mission
Polaris Dawn launches on SpaceX Dragon after 3 delays
After arriving three weeks ago at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Polaris Dawn crew boarded a SpaceX Dragon capsule for a 5:23 a.m. EDT liftoff Tuesday atop the Falcon 9.
Liftoff of Polaris Dawn! pic.twitter.com/hAti2arueX
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) September 10, 2024
Years in the making, the launch had been delayed three times – most recently because of poor weather conditions forecast for the crew's return to Earth. SpaceX had been waiting for the past several days for weather to improve off the Florida coast, where the crew will splash down on the sixth day of the mission.
SpaceX also had delayed the launch for preflight checks and again when a helium leak was detected on a piece a equipment designed to detach from the rocket during takeoff.
The Federal Aviation Administration then briefly grounded the company's Falcon 9 after an uncrewed landing mishap. Fortunately for SpaceX – and the Polaris Dawn crew – federal regulators cleared the rocket to resume launches within a couple of days.
Polaris Dawn crew to pass through Van Allen radiation belts
In the predawn hours, spectators gathered along the Florida coast to watch the daring mission lift off from launch Complex 39A.
After soaring skyward along a northeasterly trajectory, the rocket's first-stage booster detached from the spacecraft within 10 minutes of launching, guided itself back to Earth and landed as planned aboard a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. By 5:40 a.m., the Dragon spacecraft broke away from the Falcon 9's upper stage and began using its own thrusters to power on, SpaceX said on the social media site X.
Dragon has separated from Falcon 9's second stage pic.twitter.com/m0FZ0HVn4k
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) September 10, 2024
During the crew's first day in orbit, they will reach altitudes higher than any human has traveled since NASA’s Apollo lunar program came to an end in the 1970s. Climbing to a height of 870 miles – or more than three times higher than the International Space Station – will take the crew through the treacherous inner regions of Earth's Van Allen radiation belts.
The Van Allen belts pose one of the largest hazards to spacefarers venturing deep into the cosmos. For future expeditions to the moon and Mars, astronauts will have to be able to safely traverse them.
When the Polaris Dawn crew travels through the radiation belts, their SpaceX craft’s nose will be oriented to minimize astronauts’ exposure to harmful radiation.
The crew will spend five days in orbit testing space technology on behalf of SpaceX that could prove crucial as NASA and other space agencies set their sights on destinations like Mars. On the sixth day of the mission, the SpaceX vehicle will reenter Earth's atmosphere and splash down at one of seven sites off Florida.
Who are the crew of Polaris Dawn?
Isaacman, himself an experienced aviator, is the only member of the Polaris Dawn crew to have flown to space before.
The billionaire founder of internet company Shift4 Payments is mission commander for the rest of the crew: pilot Scott “Kidd” Poteet and mission specialists Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon, who is also the medical officer. Poteet, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who flew with the Thunderbirds, was mission director for Inspiration4, the world’s first all-civilian mission to space that introduced commercial space tourism to the world.
Gillis and Menon, both lead space operations engineers at SpaceX, have now become the first employees at the company to become part of a human spaceflight crew, according to SpaceX. Gillis also trained the Inspiration4 astronauts.
While in orbit, Menon, of Houston, plans to read a children's book she co-wrote, "Kisses from Space" – inspired by her experience preparing for the Polaris Dawn mission – to her two children.
A risky spacewalk and testing SpaceX tech
The crew will complete about 40 experiments, many of which aim to understand the human body's reaction to long spaceflights. They'll also test a new laser-based satellite communication system using Starlink.
But without a doubt, the highlight of the mission will be the spacewalk as the astronauts seek to become the first private citizens to carry out the daring maneuver.
The maneuver, expected on the third day of the mission, will require only Isaacman and Gillis to exit the Dragon. But doing so still exposes Poteet and Menon to considerable risk as well.
Until now, spacewalks have been done only by government astronauts. What's more, the maneuvers most often take place in craft with airlocks.
Because the Dragon does not have an airlock, the entire spacecraft will have to be depressurized when the hatch is opened, exposing the entire crew to the vacuum of space. For this reason, all four astronauts will be wearing Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) suits designed by SpaceX to receive oxygen through tethers.
"There's been a tremendous amount of preparation that’s gone into this by the SpaceX team," Menon told USA TODAY in a phone interview from the Kennedy Space Center in late August.
The purpose of the operation, which should take about two hours, is to test the suit's capabilities for SpaceX.
What's next for the Polaris Program?
Polaris Dawn is the first of three human spaceflights under the Polaris Program, all of which are intended to test SpaceX technologies needed to carry humans deep into the cosmos.
The second mission "will continue to expand the boundaries of future human spaceflight missions, in-space communications, and scientific research," according to the program's website. Additional details, including a launch date, have not yet been announced.
When the day comes that the third and final Polaris Program mission launches, it's intended to be the first human spaceflight on the SpaceX Starship rocket. The gargantuan rocket, which has so far been tested only with no crew, will as early as 2026 be used to ferry NASA astronauts to the moon's surface as part of the space agency's Artemis program.
Contributing: Brooke Edwards and Rick Neale, Florida Today
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected]
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: SpaceX launch: Polaris Dawn crew could make history with spacewalk