First private mission launches for International Space Station

First private mission launches for International Space Station
Launch

 WASHINGTON, April 9 (NNN-AGENCIES) — The first fully private mission to the International Space Station launched Friday with a four-member crew from startup company Axiom Space.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the Axiom-1 Crew Dragon capsule Endeavor blasted off at 11:17 am from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Axiom is a commercial spaceflight company that hopes to build its own space station in the next few years.

Their capsule is expected to dock at the station on Saturday.

A former US space agency (Nasa) astronaut, Michael López-Alegría, is commanding the mission.

Flying alongside him are US real estate entrepreneur and aerobatic pilot Larry Connor; Israeli investor and philanthropist Eytan Stibbe; and Canadian entrepreneur, investor and philanthropist Mark Pathy.

They’ll get to spend eight days aboard the ISS, conducting scientific research and a number of outreach projects.

Ax-1 crew
Image caption,Left to right: Eytan Stibbe, Michael López-Alegría, Mark Pathy and Larry Connor

The Axiom Space company was founded in 2016 to exploit the emerging market for commercial activities in low Earth orbit (LEO) – everything from tourism to manufacturing.

The firm is planning a series of similar missions to the ISS. The next one, Axiom-2, will take place either later this year or in early 2023. This will include a crew member chosen through a reality TV series.

The company has an agreement with Nasa to add its own modules to the American segment of the ISS. The idea eventually is that these modules will bud off on their own to become a fully private LEO destination just before the ISS is retired.

While Russia allowed private astronaut endeavours to visit the 23-year-old station as far back as 2001, Nasa resisted the practice – until announcing a change in policy in 2019 designed to boost commercial opportunities.

The agency is charging Axiom for accommodation and daily resources at the ISS. On the other hand, Nasa is purchasing from Axiom the capability to return certain scientific samples back to Earth when the company’s crew departs.

Friday’s launch is the second private spaceflight facilitated by American rocket and capsule supplier SpaceX. Last year it sent up a mission called Inspiration-4. This was purchased by billionaire Jared Isaacman. He and his three crewmates circled the Earth at an altitude much higher than the station for almost three days. — NNN-AGENCIES

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