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Next astronaut crew launches from Kennedy, bound for long-duration stay on International Space Station

NASA & SpaceX's Crew-4 launches from Kennedy Space Center. Photo: SpaceX/NASA
NASA & SpaceX's Crew-4 launches from Kennedy Space Center. Photo: SpaceX/NASA

Four astronauts are making their way to the International Space Station after launching from Kennedy Space Center early Wednesday morning, launching on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket.

Three astronauts from NASA and one from the European space agency are making the 16-hour trip to the station in SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft.

This mission flew a new SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule that the crew named ‘Freedom’ to honor the ‘human spirit of exploration’ and also the first U.S. human spaceflight in 1961 when Alan Shepard flew a Mercury capsule called Freedom 7. This is the fourth and likely last reusable capsule SpaceX plans to produce.

Once they arrive at the station, they’ll spend close to half a year aboard the station, conducting science experiments and performing maintenance on the orbiting lab.

For one of the astronauts, Jessica Watkins, it’s a history-making mission, becoming the first Black female astronaut assigned to a long-duration mission on the station.

There are currently seven astronauts on the I.S.S. now – including four from NASA’s last mission. They are due to return to Earth next week.

This is SpaceX’s fifth astronaut mission for NASA and comes just days after the company returned a crew of all private passengers who spent about two weeks on the I.S.S.

NPR’s Russell Lewis contributed to this report. 

Copyright 2022 WMFE. To see more, visit WMFE.

Brendan Byrne