SpaceX Resupplies ISS with Fresh Crew Amid Health Scare
The International Space Station is operating at full capacity again following the arrival of four new astronauts, brought by SpaceX. This follows a medical evacuation, marking NASA's first such instance in 65 years. The newly arrived crew includes US, French, and Russian astronauts for a lengthy mission.
The International Space Station (ISS) has returned to full operational strength with the successful arrival of a new contingent of astronauts. This crew change came in the wake of a medical evacuation, a rare occurrence for NASA in its 65-year history of human spaceflight.
SpaceX successfully delivered four astronauts from the United States, France, and Russia to the ISS. These astronauts will replace colleagues who were forced to depart early due to health concerns, an event causing NASA to pause scheduled spacewalks and reduce ongoing research tasks temporarily.
NASA's Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway, France's Sophie Adenot, and Russia's Andrei Fedyaev will undertake an eight to nine-month mission. Meir, notable for being part of the first all-female spacewalk in 2019, and her fellow astronauts bring varied expertise to their roles. The mission restores the ISS to its intended manpower of six full-time astronauts.
ALSO READ
-
UPDATE 1-SpaceX launches 12th long-duration crew to International Space Station
-
New astronauts launch to International Space Station after medical evacuation
-
ANALYSIS-Musk fires up SpaceX, Bezos pushes Blue Origin as US billionaires race China to moon
-
SpaceX launches 12th long-duration crew to International Space Station
-
UPDATE 6-Musk reorganizes xAI after SpaceX merger and ahead of blockbuster IPO