Why Elon Musk's SpaceX is launching astronauts for Nasa
Добавлено: Вс ноя 15, 2020 11:18 am
Why Elon Musk's SpaceX is launching astronauts for Nasa
Elon Musk's SpaceX is flying people to and from the International Space Station (ISS), using the Crew Dragon vehicle.
But why is Nasa paying a private company to launch its astronauts?
To understand the background to the Crew Dragon missions, we need to go back almost 20 years to a tragic accident.
On 1 February 2003, the space shuttle Columbia broke apart while re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. All seven astronauts aboard
perished in the disaster.
The loss of Columbia and its crew was the trigger for a dramatic shift in direction for America's human spaceflight programme.
On 14 January 2004, President George W Bush announced that the space shuttle would be retired after completion of the International
Space Station (ISS). In its place, America would build a new vehicle capable of returning astronauts to the Moon.
The following year, then-Nasa chief Mike Griffin announced that the completion of the ISS would, for the first time,
open up commercial opportunities for the routine transportation of cargo and astronauts to low-Earth orbit.
This, Griffin reasoned, was required to free up enough funds to achieve a Moon return. Nasa established a Commercial Crew & Cargo
Program Office (C3PO) to oversee the effort.
At the time, SpaceX, the company started by South African-born entrepreneur Elon Musk was just a few years old. Musk had lofty
ambitions about bringing down the cost of spaceflight by re-using space hardware and settling humans on Mars.
The truth about it can be traced here. : slotxo
Elon Musk's SpaceX is flying people to and from the International Space Station (ISS), using the Crew Dragon vehicle.
But why is Nasa paying a private company to launch its astronauts?
To understand the background to the Crew Dragon missions, we need to go back almost 20 years to a tragic accident.
On 1 February 2003, the space shuttle Columbia broke apart while re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. All seven astronauts aboard
perished in the disaster.
The loss of Columbia and its crew was the trigger for a dramatic shift in direction for America's human spaceflight programme.
On 14 January 2004, President George W Bush announced that the space shuttle would be retired after completion of the International
Space Station (ISS). In its place, America would build a new vehicle capable of returning astronauts to the Moon.
The following year, then-Nasa chief Mike Griffin announced that the completion of the ISS would, for the first time,
open up commercial opportunities for the routine transportation of cargo and astronauts to low-Earth orbit.
This, Griffin reasoned, was required to free up enough funds to achieve a Moon return. Nasa established a Commercial Crew & Cargo
Program Office (C3PO) to oversee the effort.
At the time, SpaceX, the company started by South African-born entrepreneur Elon Musk was just a few years old. Musk had lofty
ambitions about bringing down the cost of spaceflight by re-using space hardware and settling humans on Mars.
The truth about it can be traced here. : slotxo