SpaceX: Amateur astronauts launch on Inspiration4 mission

Four amateur astronauts have blasted off from Florida on their private mission to orbit. The Inspiration4 crew, comprising one billionaire and three “ordinary citizens”, rode out of the Kennedy Space Center in a Dragon capsule provided by the SpaceX rocket company. The quartet will spend the next three days circling the Earth.

It’s another milestone in the space tourism market, which is experiencing a resurgence after a decade’s hiatus. Earlier this summer, billionaire businessmen Sir Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos went above Earth’s atmosphere in their own space vehicles. And following this latest mission, there’ll be two privateer visits to the International Space Station (ISS) - one in October, carrying a Russian movie director and an actress, and a second early in the New Year.

The Inspiration4 crew of Jared Issacman, Hayley Arceneaux, Sian Proctor and Chris Sembroski have had six months of intensive training with SpaceX. However, onboard computer systems will be in control of their Dragon capsule, overseen by SpaceX experts on the ground.

The Dragon is not going anywhere near the ISS. It’s on a “free flight” to a target altitude of 575km (360 miles). That’s about 150km above the orbiting laboratory, and roughly the height from where the Hubble Space Telescope views the cosmos.

Even if they don’t have a destination as such, the foursome will have plenty to keep them occupied. They’ve taken up scientific experiments to be conducted inside their Dragon capsule, and SpaceX has modified their temporary home to include a big window, which the crew is sure to be using during downtime to wonder at the Earth below.

The Inspiration4 venture was purchased from SpaceX by Mr Isaacman, 38, who made his fortune developing systems to process credit card payments. But rather than go on an “outing with fishing buddies”, he decided, as he saw it, to inject real purpose into the flight.

So, he gifted the three adjacent seats to people with inspirational stories.

Amazing … I’d not heard about this before … :astonished:

The Crew Dragon Resilience has completed its second phasing burn and now orbiting Earth at an altitude of 364 miles (585 kilometers) — actually 6 miles (10 km) higher than planned, SpaceX announced on Twitter, adding that this is a new altitude record for the spacecraft.

Resilience is currently orbiting above the Atlantic Ocean heading toward Africa, and you can monitor the spacecraft’s position live at spacex.com/launches. They will complete one orbit every 90 minutes, seeing 15 sunrises and sunsets every day.

Inspiration4: All-amateur space crew enjoy views of Earth

Crew

image caption(L-R) Jared Isaacman, Hayley Arceneaux, Sian Proctor and Chris Sembroski come home at the weekend

Not much information has been released since launch about the activities of the crew, who are the subject of an exclusive Netflix documentary.

It’s known that they are well, having adjusted to their weightless environment, and have been conducting some scientific experiments.

It’s also known that they have been in conversation with family and friends on Earth, and have conducted a Q&A with patients at St Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

Ms Arceneaux is a physician assistant (known as a physician associate in the UK) at the hospital, having also been treated there as a 10 year-old for bone cancer.

Mr Isaacman hopes the interest around the Inspiration4 flight can help raise $200m for St Jude.

The crew are due back on Earth at the weekend. Their capsule will bring them to a splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean.

So far, so good … :+1: