NASA gives SpaceX Crew Dragon permission for its First Test Flight
SpaceX is just a week away from its biggest mission, to launch the Crew Dragon, the new passenger spacecraft.
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SpaceX is just a week away from its biggest mission, to launch the Crew Dragon, the new passenger spacecraft.
All of 4K video and Time-lapse sequences were taken by the astronauts onboard the ISS (NASA/ESA).
SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft and Falcon 9 rocket are positioned at the company’s hangar at Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, ahead of
NASA astronauts Anne McClain (background) and Serena Auñón-Chancellor are pictured inside the U.S. Destiny laboratory module aboard the International Space Station.
“Putting this journey into words will not be easy, but I will try. I am finally where I was born to be,” said @AstroAnnimal, NASA astronaut Anne
Curling snow drifts are magnified by the terrain around the 1,400 mile Dnieper River, flowing from Russia to the Black Sea.
Crew safe after Soyuz launch abort. NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin forced to make an emergency land, following a malfunction of their Soyuz
Dangerous Hurricane Lane is currently heading to Hawaii.
SpaceX revealed the interior of its Crew Dragon spacecraft, slated to head to the Space Station on February 2019.
Taken on July 20, 2018, this image shows one of four basketball court-sized main solar arrays that power the Space Station.