Tag: nasa starliner

  • NASA Decides to Bring Starliner Spacecraft Back to Earth

    NASA Decides to Bring Starliner Spacecraft Back to Earth

    The manned “Starliner” space capsule has reached its destination and docked with the ISS. Due to a series of problems, the project is years behind schedule – and this time, too, not everything went smoothly.

    The “Starliner”, carrying two NASA astronauts, has docked at the International Space Station ISS – but on the way there it once again struggled with numerous technical problems. A helium leak had already been discovered before the launch, but according to NASA’s assessment it did not pose a danger to the flight.

    However, two more leaks occurred during the flight. Later, four of the capsule’s 28 engines failed. NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams managed to restart three of them, so there were enough safety reserves for the rest of the flight.

    The “Starliner” missed the first opportunity to dock and circled next to the station for another hour. It was only on the second attempt that the spacecraft managed to dock with the ISS. All three leaks are now being monitored, valves have been closed and the spacecraft is still stable, NASA said.

    Project is still behind schedule

    The “Starliner” set off on its first manned test flight on Wednesday after years of delays. The test flight had previously been postponed several times due to various technical problems with the spacecraft and rocket. In May 2022, the “Starliner”, developed and built by the US aircraft manufacturer Boeing, completed its first successful unmanned flight to the ISS and spent four days there – an important test for the spacecraft.

    In the future, it will transport astronauts to the ISS as an alternative to SpaceX’s “Crew Dragon” space capsule. However, due to a number of problems, the project is far behind schedule, while the “Crew Dragon” has been regularly bringing astronauts to the ISS for several years.

    Two astronauts on board

    “Starliner” sets off on first manned test flight

    After years of delays, the “Starliner” space capsule from the US company Boeing has launched into space with humans for the first time. The rocket took off from the Cape Canaveral spaceport and is on its way to the ISS.

    After many delays, the crisis-ridden spacecraft “Starliner” has set off on its first manned test flight to the International Space Station ISS. With NASA astronauts Barry Wilmore and Suni Williams on board, the spacecraft launched from the Cape Canaveral spaceport in the US state of Florida using an “Atlas V” rocket, as live images from the US space agency NASA showed.

    “Here we go, Atlas! Here we go, Starliner! Good luck, Butch and Suni!” came the call from the control center shortly before the rocket took off.

    “Two brave NASA astronauts are on their way on this historic first test flight of a brand new spacecraft,” said NASA boss Bill Nelson. Boeing’s “Starliner” marks a new chapter in American research. “Manned spaceflight is a bold task – but that’s why it’s worth it. It’s an exciting time for NASA, our commercial partners and the future of exploration.”

    Test flights previously postponed several times

    The test flight had previously been postponed several times due to various technical problems with the spacecraft and rocket, and had been canceled twice in recent weeks just minutes before a scheduled launch. Among other things, there were problems with a helium leak and a faulty computer system on the ground.

    The “Starliner” – a partially reusable spacecraft that consists of a capsule for the crew that is around three meters high and a service module and, unlike the “Crew Dragon”, lands on the ground rather than on water – is expected to arrive at the ISS on Thursday. Wilmore and Williams are expected to stay there for around a week.

    Williams, 58, and Wilmore, 61, have each been in space twice before. “It almost feels unreal,” Williams said in advance of her return to the ISS. The “Crew Dragon” space capsule currently docked at the ISS was moved to another docking station for the arrival of the “Starliner.”

    Spare part is on board

    In short notice, the “Starliner” also took an urgently needed spare part for the ISS: a urine pump that helps convert the astronauts’ urine into drinking water broke earlier than expected, NASA said. A quickly obtained spare part has now been packed into the “Starliner.”

    In May 2022, the Starliner, developed and built by US aircraft manufacturer Boeing, completed its first successful unmanned flight to the ISS and spent four days there – an important test for the spacecraft.

    During the first test without a crew in 2019, the “Starliner” did not even arrive at the ISS. In the future, it will transport astronauts to the ISS as an alternative to SpaceX’s “Crew Dragon” space capsule. However, due to a number of problems, the project is far behind schedule, while the Crew Dragon has been regularly bringing astronauts to the ISS for several years.

    Boeing space capsule

    “Starliner” reaches ISS for the first time

    The crisis-ridden Boeing space capsule “Starliner” has made it to the International Space Station ISS for the first time. It docked during the night. Several previous attempts had failed.

    After launching from the Cape Canaveral spaceport, Boeing’s “Starliner” has arrived at the ISS for the first time. The unmanned spacecraft docked at the human outpost around 400 kilometers above Earth during the night after a flight lasting just over a day.

    The critical test for the crisis-ridden “Starliner” has thus been successful for the time being. The project is more than two years behind schedule due to a number of problems.

    Project is well behind schedule

    Boeing’s spacecraft will be used as an alternative to SpaceX’s “Crew Dragon” space capsule to transport astronauts to the ISS. This should have happened a long time ago, but during an initial test in December 2019, the spacecraft did not make it to the ISS – partly because of a problem with the automatic ignition of the engines.

    Last year, the mission was postponed several times – and then the “Starliner” finally had to go back to the workshop due to valve problems.

    NASA speaks of “milestone”

    NASA described the launch as a “milestone.” On board are over 300 kilograms of cargo, including supplies for the ISS crew. The “Starliner” is a partially reusable spacecraft consisting of a capsule for the crew and a service module that can be launched with a rocket. Once approved for the transport of people, it can carry up to four crew members to the ISS.

    Test flight to ISS

    Boeing’s “Starliner” misses orbit

    It was supposed to be good news for the struggling US aircraft manufacturer Boeing – but the test flight of its “Starliner” spacecraft to the ISS failed. The capsule missed the correct orbit.

    The unmanned test flight of Boeing’s new Starliner space capsule to the International Space Station (ISS) has failed after a serious error.

    After the launch of a rocket with the unmanned space capsule on board at the US space station Cape Canaveral, a problem arose with the automatic ignition of the engines due to a timer that was running incorrectly. As a result, the spacecraft consumed so much fuel that it could no longer reach the orbit of the ISS.

    Early return on Sunday

    The spacecraft was scheduled to dock with the ISS for the first time on Saturday and return to Earth in eight days. On board is a doll called “Rosie” as an astronaut dummy, as well as Christmas treats and gifts for the ISS crew. The capsule is now scheduled to be returned to Earth on Sunday and land in the US state of New Mexico.

    Boeing developed the “Starliner” for NASA. It is intended to bring American astronauts to the ISS in the future. NASA is currently dependent on Russian Soyuz rockets for manned missions. In 2011, it discontinued its own shuttle program after three decades. Since then, NASA astronauts have flown from the Russian space agency’s launch site in Kazakhstan. This cost the US space agency up to 86 million dollars (77 million euros) per flight.

    Strategy change in US space policy

    Under former US President Barack Obama, a change in strategy was introduced: instead of developing new rockets themselves, it was decided to hire private companies to do the work. Boeing and its competitor SpaceX subsequently received billions to develop manned space shuttles “Made in the USA”.

    Both US companies are two years behind schedule, but both now appear to be almost finished with development. The first manned flight of the capsule, which has a diameter of 4.50 meters, was previously planned for next year. However, final tests such as the “Starliner” flight are still necessary before their space shuttles can be approved for manned space travel.

    SpaceX test in March was successful

    SpaceX has already completed a successful test flight to the ISS in March with its space shuttle “CrewDragon”, which is intended for manned missions. Also on board was a dummy, named “Ripley” after the main character in the “Alien” films. The dummies are equipped with sensors to replicate the flight conditions for real people.

    The US aircraft manufacturer Boeing recently came under massive pressure due to the disaster surrounding its 737 Max jet. After two devastating crashes, the aircraft was banned from taking off. It is uncertain when it will be able to take off again.

    “Starliner” capsule on its way to the ISS

    Boeing’s troubled space program can finally report a success: A “Starliner” capsule launched on an unmanned test flight to the ISS. However, there were problems this time too.

    The space shuttle was initially launched at 6:54 pm Eastern Time from the spaceport at Cape Canaveral in the US state of Florida. From then on, the unmanned “Starliner” needed a total of 32 minutes to reach a safe orbit around the Earth. It was powered by an Atlas 5 rocket, which was finally successfully separated from the capsule in various stages.

    Two nozzles defective

    When positioning the “Starliner”, only ten of the twelve correction nozzles worked, Mark Stich of the US space agency NASA said at a press conference after the launch. For the others, it must be determined whether it is the instruments that are causing the commands to arrive. “At the moment, we can carry out all maneuvers with the remaining correction nozzles.”

    From Earth orbit to the ISS

    From orbit, the “Starline” is approaching the International Space Station (ISS) and initially docked – a maneuver that is not expected to take place until Saturday night. But for now, the successful launch was a relief for NASA and the manufacturer Boeing – the mission had been marked by failures up to now.

    In December 2019, a software error meant that a flight attempt had to be aborted before the docking maneuver with the ISS. Another launch last August had to be stopped during the countdown because valves did not open. It was only the third attempt that brought the hoped-for breakthrough.

    “There will be a few more sleepless nights.”

    Now the team is relieved. However, Boeing’s Mark Nappi warns against premature euphoria. The mission has four phases. “The first includes launch preparations and launch. And that went really well. Then the orbit and docking. And that will be another exciting day. So there will be a few more sleepless nights.”

    The aim is to use the “Starliner” to bring both astronauts and cargo to the space station in the future. Even though the current mission is unmanned, a test dummy called “Rosie the Rocketeer” sits in one of the chairs. There is also food and other goods on board for the ISS crew.

    US astronauts and cosmonauts reach ISS

    Space is one of the few areas in which the US and Russia have continued to work together since the beginning of the Ukraine war around two years ago. Three US astronauts and one cosmonaut have now arrived on the ISS space station.

    Three US astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut have arrived at the International Space Station ISS after their journey through space. The space capsule with the space station’s new occupants docked at the ISS.

    After the hatch was opened, the new arrivals Matthew Dominick, Jeanette Epps and Michael Barratt from the USA and Alexander Grebenkin from Russia were warmly welcomed by the current ISS crew, as could be seen on the video broadcast by the US space agency NASA.

    New crew to stay for half a year

    The crew members who have now arrived will replace four of the seven current ISS occupants. After a transition phase of a few days, the four crew members from the USA, Denmark, Japan and Russia will return to Earth.

    The new crew will work on the ISS for around six months, and various medical experiments are planned, including those involving stem cells. For Epps, Dominick and Grebenkin, this is their first space flight, and Barratt will be visiting the space station for the third time.

    Success for space company SpaceX

    As in the past, tech billionaire Elon Musk’s private space company SpaceX carried out the mission to replace personnel on the ISS space station. The so-called “Crew-8” took off on Sunday on board a “Crew Dragon” capsule with the help of a Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center in the US state of Florida.

    The flight had been postponed several times. It had originally been planned for February 22nd. This was the second time since the start of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and the resulting tensions between the USA and Russia that astronauts from both countries went into space together. Space is one of the few areas in which both countries still work together.

    Russia and USA continue joint flights to the ISS

    The International Space Station is one of the few projects on which the USA and Russia are still working together. Both sides have now signed an agreement to continue joint flights to the ISS until 2025.

    Russia and the USA have agreed to extend their agreement for joint flights to the International Space Station ISS. In July and December, both sides signed two additional agreements to continue the cross-flights until 2025, the Russian space agency Roscosmos announced.

    The aim is to maintain the reliability of the ISS’s operations, Roscosmos explained. This will also ensure that at least one NASA astronaut and one Russian cosmonaut are on the station at any one time.

    In the so-called cross-flights, a US astronaut flies to the ISS as part of the crew of a Russian spacecraft and vice versa. In September, two Russian cosmonauts and a US astronaut flew to the ISS on board a Russian Soyuz capsule from the Kazakh spaceport Baikonur.

    Russia withdraws from ISS

    The ISS, which has been orbiting the Earth since 1998, is one of the few areas in which Russia and the USA are still cooperating even after the start of the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine in February 2022. Its operation was originally planned until 2024, but the US space agency NASA does not want to decommission it until 2030. However, Roscosmos had already announced in July 2022 that it would withdraw from the project after 2024. Instead, Moscow is planning its own space station.

    President Vladimir Putin announced in October that the first module for the Russian space station would be launched into space in 2027. At the same time, he said that despite the recent setbacks, he would stick to the previous space program goals, including above all the Russian moon program.

    Russia plans to leave the International Space Station (ISS) in 2024. This was announced by the new head of the space agency, Borissov. Cooperation with the USA has been repeatedly called into question in the course of the Ukraine war.

    Russia plans to exit the International Space Station ISS after 2024. This was stated by the new head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, Yuri Borisov, at a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Tensions between Moscow and Washington

    “Of course, we will fulfill all our obligations to our partners, but the decision to withdraw from this station after 2024 has been made,” said Borisov. The former Deputy Prime Minister Borisov has been the head of the Russian space agency since mid-July, succeeding agency head Dmitry Rogozin.

    Rogozin had recently repeatedly questioned cooperation with the USA in light of political tensions between Moscow and Washington in the wake of the war in Ukraine. After the start of the Russian offensive in Ukraine, the West imposed a series of sanctions against Russia. However, cooperation continued on the ISS.

    Borissov said that construction of a Russian space station would begin before the exit. The ISS had recently become old and had repeatedly caused a stir due to breakdowns. Rogozin had previously not ruled out the possibility of detaching the Russian module from the ISS and continuing to operate it independently. He also hinted at the possible use of the station for military earth observation.

    NASA: No official notification yet

    The US space agency, NASA, said that Roscosmos had not yet officially communicated the decision. “We have not received any official notification from our Russian partners,” said Robyn Gatens, the ISS director based at NASA headquarters. She also made it clear that the US had no interest in ending its cooperation with Russia: the Russians, like all other parties involved, have always been good partners, and they want to continue that as agreed until the end of this decade.

    US astronaut Kjell Lindgren spoke from the ISS itself: The crew has not yet received any official notification, he said. However, they will continue to work together successfully on the ISS to achieve scientific results and ensure the safety of the crew and the space station.

    Following the war of aggression against Ukraine ordered by Kremlin leader Putin, Western countries have also imposed sanctions on the Russian space industry. The ISS is a joint project of the USA, Canada, Japan, the European Space Agency (ESA) and Russia. It is divided into a Russian and a US segment.

    Moscow questions cooperation with ISS

    Russia still has plans to work on the International Space Station (ISS) until 2024. What will happen after that is unclear. Russia could detach its module and use it for military earth observation.

    In view of the war in Ukraine, Russia has questioned its cooperation in the operation of the International Space Station (ISS). “The decision on the fate of the ISS will depend largely on the situation in and around our country,” said the head of the Russian space agency, Dmitri Rogozin, to the Tass news agency. In the event of an exit, however, Moscow will inform its partners a year in advance.

    Russia’s participation in the station is provisionally planned until 2024. Previously, Rogozin had not ruled out the possibility of disconnecting the Russian module from the ISS and continuing to operate it independently. He also hinted at a possible use of the station for military earth observation.

    Russian space travel also sanctioned

    The Russian government also wants to decide by mid-May whether it will continue to take Western astronauts to the ISS on its spaceships. Following the war of aggression against Ukraine ordered by Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin, Western countries have also imposed sanctions on the Russian space industry.

    Russia’s war and its consequences in space

    The ISS was initiated as an international peace project – but now Russia is waging war. What does that mean for the future of the space station? And what for the seven astronauts on board?

    Four Americans, two Russians and one German – that is the current crew on the International Space Station ISS. How is the international crew dealing with the war in Ukraine? And how is the German ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer, who flew to the ISS in November, doing? A press conference at which the astronaut actually wanted to answer journalists’ questions today was cancelled by the ESA.

    “We get along well.”

    Instead, Josef Aschbacher, the ESA Director General, provides information and explains that Matthias Maurer is doing well. In an interview with tagesschau.de, he talks about a phone call he had with him:

    Mr Maurer says: ‘Don’t worry about me. We get on well.’ But he says that of course they in the space station also see what is happening here on the ground. That is very worrying. One message he wants to convey is that from the perspective of space you can see how fragile our beautiful planet is. It is incomprehensible that war is being waged here.

    ISS planned a peace project

    The ESA boss has left open what will happen to the International Space Station as a whole. The space station is operated by NASA, the Russian space agency Roscosmos and the European Space Agency (ESA), among others. “The system is very closely intertwined, we are dependent on each other,” Aschbacher explains. “That was exactly the purpose of the ISS when it was built, that it was a peace project between different nations, peoples and cultures and that worked very well for more than 20 years. Now we have a new situation.”

    He does not go into more detail, but cooperation seems to be assured, at least in the short term. An immediate withdrawal by the Russians could be problematic, explains former astronaut Ulrich Walter: “That would be difficult because a central module of the space station, a kind of control module, is from the Russians. So if the Russians were to withdraw immediately, we would have relatively big problems. But we don’t need to worry about that at the moment, because the Russians have not said they are withdrawing.”

    Connected in space

    The example of the ISS shows how interconnected the cooperation between states in space is. SWR science editor Uwe Gradwohl gives examples: “American rockets fly with Russian engines. A company based in the USA markets the launches of the Russian Proton carrier rocket. The first stage of the Antares rocket is built in Ukraine, with Russian propulsion and launches from Florida.”

    Since the end of the Cold War, ESA has always been careful to carry out joint projects with many players, be it the Americans, Russians or the Chinese. ESA astronaut Maurer took part in survival training for astronauts in China and flew to the ISS in a space capsule from the US company SpaceX. His predecessor Alexander Gerst launched into space with the Russians from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in 2014 and 2018.

    Sanctions against Russia also affect Mars mission

    Now states and space agencies like the ESA have to reorganize themselves as the sanctions against Russia take effect. In concrete terms, the European-Russian Mars mission “ExoMars” is currently in jeopardy. This autumn, a European Mars rover was supposed to launch from Baikonur on board a Russian Proton rocket.

    “The Mars rover is an ESA project, but it also contains Russian hardware. And without the Russian landing platform, the rover cannot roll onto the surface of Mars,” explains science editor Gradwohl. Replacing the Russian part of the project with European developments is not possible any time soon. “Even the time until the next launch opportunity to Mars in 2024 is probably too short.”

    “Chinese are now better than the Russians”

    The Crimean crisis in 2014 already had long-term consequences for space travel. At that time, for example, the US Congress decided that US military and government payloads could no longer flow into space on rockets equipped with Russian rocket engines. However, a very long transition period until the end of 2022 was set.

    The question of which alliances will form in space in the future is exciting. For example, are Russia and China getting closer? Former astronaut Walter does not believe that: “The Chinese have been copying Russian space technology since the 1960s and in the 1990s improved Russian technology to such an extent that they are now better than the Russians.” The Russians have always lacked money – unlike the Chinese, who have a lot of money. “They are massively expanding space travel. They are now really superior to the Russians, and in some cases even to the Americans, in space travel. They do not need partners,” says Walter.

    ESA astronaut Matthias will probably return from the ISS in May – again on board a SpaceX capsule. Before that, his US astronaut colleague Mark Vande Hei was scheduled to make the return flight. He flew into space on board a Soyuz capsule last year. The plan was for him to fly back with the Russians. It will be interesting to see how this story ends.

    NASA cancels test flight with “Starliner” spacecraft

    The “Starliner” was supposed to transport astronauts long ago, but the project is far behind schedule. The first manned test flight has now had to be postponed again.

    The eagerly awaited launch of the first manned Boeing “Starliner” rocket into space has had to be postponed due to technical problems. The test flight, which had already been postponed several times, will now be rescheduled for Friday at the earliest, Boeing announced.

    The flight was aborted less than two hours before the evening countdown (local time) because a problem with a valve in the second rocket stage could not be fixed in time, NASA said in its live stream.

    The CST-200 “Starliner” was to be launched on an “Atlas-V” rocket from the United Launch Alliance, a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin, from the Kennedy Space Center of the US space agency NASA in Florida and bring two astronauts to the International Space Station ISS.

    The two NASA astronauts, Barry Wilmore and Suni Williams, left the “Starliner” capsule and returned to their crew quarters at the Cape Canaveral spaceport.

    New start attempt on Friday

    The new launch date is now set for Friday. The “Crew Dragon” docked at the ISS and moved to another docking station for the arrival of the “Starliner.”

    In May 2022, the “Starliner”, developed and built by the US aircraft manufacturer Boeing, completed its first successful unmanned flight to the ISS and spent four days there – an important test for the spacecraft.

    Prestige project for Boeing

    After a series of crises in commercial aviation, Boeing is already facing intense public scrutiny and a comprehensive review of its quality control. With the “Starliner”, the company wanted to send a signal of success.

    In order to save the program, which is years behind schedule, the planned costs have so far been exceeded by more than $1.5 billion. While Boeing is struggling, Tesla boss Elon Musk’s SpaceX has become a reliable partner for NASA in transporting space.

    Three Americans and one Russian launched to the ISS

    For the second time since the attack on Ukraine, astronauts from Russia and the USA have flown into space together. On board the ISS, they will work together on research projects and grow “organoids.”

    After several postponements, three US astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut have launched on a six-month mission on the International Space Station ISS. A “Falcon 9” rocket from tech billionaire Elon Musk’s private US space company SpaceX lifted off late Sunday evening (local time) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

    A launch attempt planned for the previous day had been cancelled due to strong winds. This was not the first postponement of the flight: the launch had originally been planned for February 22nd.

    With the start of the mission, astronauts from both countries flew into space together for the umpteenth time, despite the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine and the resulting immense tensions between the USA and Russia.

    Space flight for research purposes

    NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, their colleague Jeanette Epps and cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin are expected to arrive at the ISS on Tuesday morning (CET). For Epps, Grebenkin and Dominick, this will be their first space flight, and Barratt will be visiting the ISS for the third time.

    There are currently seven crew members on board the space station. In a few days, four of the existing crew members, from the USA, Denmark, Japan and Russia, will return to Earth.

    The new crew wants to conduct experiments on the International Space Station with stem cells and grow so-called organoids. Such tiny organs can be used to research organ diseases, among other things.

    First private space mission launched

    The private space company SpaceX has sent paying guests to the International Space Station for the first time. Three businessmen and a former NASA astronaut are scheduled to dock with the ISS early Saturday morning.

    The first private space mission, Axiom AX1, took off for the International Space Station ISS at exactly 11:17 am local time. The launch of the SpaceX “Falcon 9 rocket” with the crew capsule “Dragon” at its top from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida went smoothly under a bright blue sky. As planned, the capsule with the four astronauts on board separated from the rocket shortly after takeoff, which then successfully returned to Earth.

    20 hours through space

    The four astronauts – three businessmen from the USA, Canada and Israel, as well as a former NASA astronaut – are now on a 20-hour journey through space to the International Space Station. They are scheduled to dock there early Saturday morning and be brought on board the ISS after the two-hour maneuver.

    The four private citizens will then stay on the ISS for eight days and carry out various experiments – including cancer research, the aging process of cells and everything related to human life in space.

    700 hours of training

    It is the first space mission by the private Texas company Axiom in collaboration with SpaceX and NASA. Axiom plans to add its own module to the ISS in two years to enable private space travel and research. Axiom is planning well over 100 such missions in the coming years.

    The three private astronauts trained around 700 hours for their eight-day trip into space and each paid 50 million US dollars.

    US-Americans and Russians fly to the ISS

    Even in times of political tension, we can achieve something together, says US astronaut Rubio before launching to the International Space Station. He did not speak to his two Russian crew colleagues about the war in Ukraine beforehand.

    Despite the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine, an American and two Russians are flying together to the International Space Station (ISS) today. The three are scheduled to take off from the Russian spaceport Baikonur in the Republic of Kazakhstan on board a Soyuz rocket this afternoon. This was announced by the Russian space agency Roscosmos.

    It is the first joint flight since the start of the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine on February 24. In October, Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina is also scheduled to fly to the ISS from the USA. Both flights are intended to give hope that cooperation on the ISS will continue. Russia recently announced that it wants to withdraw from the project after 2024. No exact date has been announced so far.

    Supplies on board

    In addition to the crew, there are also 120 kilograms of supplies for the ISS on board the Soyuz capsule – for example hygiene and medical items, scientific equipment and the astronauts’ personal belongings. For the Russian cosmonaut Sergei Prokopyev, this is the second flight to the ISS, and for his colleague Dmitri Petelin and US astronaut Frank Rubio, this is the first time.

    “The program is quite full – in addition to the rapid docking, five spacewalks are planned,” Prokopyev said before the start of the 68th ISS mission. 48 experiments are planned – including one with a 3D printer in zero gravity. Various figures are to be printed out of different materials.

    The three do not talk about the war

    “It’s an honor for me to follow in the footsteps of previous astronauts,” said NASA astronaut Rubio. Space travel is an opportunity to achieve something together, even in times of political tension.

    Apparently the crew did not talk about the war beforehand. All three made it clear that they would miss their families most of all during the six months they would be on the ISS.

    The commander of the 67th expedition, Oleg Artemyev, the cosmonauts Denis Matveyev and Sergei Korsakov, the NASA astronauts Bob Hines, Kjell Lindgren, Jessica Watkins and the Italian Samantha Cristoforetti from the European Space Agency ESA are already on the ISS. They are orbiting around 400 kilometers above the Earth.

    NASA and Roscosmos cooperate

    Back to the ISS together

    US astronauts and Russian cosmonauts will fly to the International Space Station together again in the future – sometimes rockets will be launched in Baikonur, sometimes in Florida. This is intended to ensure their presence on the ISS.

    The space agencies of the USA and Russia are working more closely together again. From September onwards, flights to the International Space Station ISS will take place with a mixed crew in Russian and US capsules.

    Roscosmos said the agreement was in the interests of both countries and would deepen cooperation in the area of ​​the ISS. This would ensure that in the event of delayed or cancelled rocket launches, there would always be at least one Roscosmos and one NASA member on the ISS. NASA said the decision was made for security reasons and to ensure the “US presence in space.”

    Unusual timing?

    The agreement was made public shortly after Russian President Vladimir Putin replaced the head of Roscosmos. The previous head ofthe agency, Dmitry Rogozin, had taken a confrontational stance towards the West since the beginning of the Ukraine war. He threatened to withdraw from the ISS and described cooperation with the West as “impossible”.

    SpaceX now also flies cosmonauts

    In September, astronaut Frank Rubio is scheduled to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome together with Sergei Prokopyev and Dimitri Petelinon board a Russian capsule.

    Later, Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina will be brought to theISS from Florida together with two US and one Japanese astronaut. She will be the first female cosmonaut to launch into space on a SpaceX rocket.

    US astronauts had already flown into space on Russian rockets from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan by 2020. After that, mannedISS flights also took off from US soil again.

    Soyuz capsule launched for retrieval operation

    In mid-December, astronauts on the ISS discovered a leak in their return rocket – they have been stuck ever since. An unmanned Russian Soyuz capsule has now launched to the space station earlier than planned to bring it back to Earth.

    An unmanned Soyuz rocket has launched on a return mission to the International Space Station ISS. The Soyuz MS-23 took off from the spaceport in Baikonur, Kazakhstan, on Friday morning, as live images from the US space agency NASA showed. The spacecraft is scheduled to dock with the ISS on Sunday and bring three astronauts stranded on the space station back toEarth in September.

    The launch and entry into orbit of the spacecraft “went normally,” said the Russian space agency Roscosmos. Docking with the ISS is scheduled for February 26 at 1:01 a.m. GMT (2:01 a.m. CET).

    Soyuz MS-23 was originally scheduled to launch in March

    Originally, US astronaut Frank Rubio and the two Russian cosmonauts Sergei Prokopyev and Dmitri Petel in were supposed to fly back to Earth in the Soyuz MS-22 space capsule at the end of March. However, this was apparently damaged in mid-December by a small meteorite that caused a leak in the spacecraft’s cooling system. The mission of the three astronauts was extended by six months due to the breakdown. The Soyuz MS-23 space capsule was actually only supposed to launch to the ISS in mid-March with three successors for Rubio, Propkolev and Petelin on board. However, due to the damage to the MS-22 capsule, the launch was brought forward and now took place without a crew.

    The astronaut and the two cosmonauts will now spend almost a year on the space station. The capsules will usually remain docked at the station for the entire duration of the crew’s research mission in order to be able to return astronauts to Earth in the event of an emergency.

    In addition to the three affected crew members, there are four other people on board the ISS: the Russian Anna Kikina, the US astronaut Nicole Mann and her compatriot Josh Cassada, and the Japanese Koichi Wakata. They flew into space in October as part of the so-called Crew-5 mission on board a space capsule belonging to the US space company SpaceX, owned by multi-billionaire Elon Musk.

    Next week, the four participants of the subsequent Crew 6 mission – two US citizens, an Emirati and a Russian – will join them. They are also to arrive in a SpaceX capsule that is scheduled to launch from Florida on Monday. After a “handover” lasting several days, the Crew 5 astronauts will then be to return to Earth.

    A glimmer of hope for rapprochement?

    German astronaut Reinhold Ewald did not want to talk of a “rescue mission” in the case of the current Soyuz mission. “The crew is not stranded somewhere. Even if many systems fail, the Soyuz has ways and means of steering the capsule home.” In one way, the problems on Earth are greater than in space. “This is a major effort for Russian space travel. The Soyuz, which is being sent up unmanned, was intended for a crew. This is already a significant disruption to the sequence. Russia does not produce them in advance,” said the 66-year-old.

    Ewald, who flew to the Russian space station “Mir” in a Soyuz capsule in 1997 and conducted research for three weeks, pointed to the pragmatic ongoing cooperation between NASA and Roscosmos despite the war in Ukraine: “The situation is bad enough. This is perhaps a glimmer of hope that we are coming closer together again.” He does not believe that Russia will soon withdraw from the ISS program. “Moscow only recently sent up a science module. I think that Russia will use its investment in the station for as long as possible.”

    Since the start of the Russian offensive in Ukraine a year ago, space has been one of the few areas in which Russia and the USA still work together. The ISS has been in operation since 1998.

    ISS astronauts will not return until September

    In mid-December, astronauts discovered a leak in their capsule – and have been stuck on the ISS ever since. A new Russian space capsule is scheduled to launch next Friday to pick up the three men – and will not return until September.

    The Russian space agency Roscosmos plans to bring three astronauts stuck on the International Space Station ISS back to Earth in September instead of next month – one year after their departure.

    Roscosmos announced that the return flight with the Soyuz MS-23 space capsule is currently planned for September. Originally, the US astronaut Frank Rubio and the two Russian cosmonauts Sergei Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin were supposed to fly back to Earth with the Soyuz MS-22 at the end of March.

    Micrometeorite probably caused the leak

    After a leak was discovered in the spacecraft’s cooling system in mid-December, the astronauts who have been stationed on the ISS since September are now to be picked up by the Soyuz MS-23. According to Roscosmos, the Soyuz MS-23 is scheduled to launch next Friday from the spaceport in Baikonur, Kazakhstan, but will not return to Earth until September.

    Both the US space agencies NASA and Roscosmos believe the leak was caused by a micrometeorite, a tiny particle of space rock that hit the capsule at high speed.

    According to Roscosmos, the astronauts have responded “positively” to the extension of their mission on the ISS, and the longer stay in space does not pose any danger to their health.

    No “Starliner” test flight again

    The aviation group Boeing has again postponed the test flight of the “Starliner” space capsule, which was planned for today. The company is also aiming for an important role in space travel – and is therefore under pressure to succeed.

    Boeing’s Starliner space capsule will not launch today either: The aviation company, which is also aiming for space, has cancelled the launch planned for 7:20 pm Central European Time. Boeing Space confirmed the media reports on Twitter. The reason is apparently problems with valves in the space capsule’s propulsion system. In a written statement, it says that the company is considering launching tomorrow.

    “We are disappointed by today’s events and the need to once again postpone the Starliner launch,” said John Vollmer, manager of Boeing’s Commercial Crew Program. Manned spaceflight is a complex, precise undertaking that does not forgive mistakes. “The Boeing and NASA teams are taking the time they need to ensure the safety and integrity of the spacecraft and to achieve the mission’s goals.”

    Keeping pace in a fast-growing, competitive industry

    Today’s launch was actually supposed to be an important step for the US aviation group to keep up with the growing competition in the commercial space travel business. In addition to the aviation group, Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s SpaceX, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and British entrepreneur Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic are also involved. The industry is growing rapidly.

    First attempt failed

    With the second launch attempt, Boeing wanted to get its space program back on track. The spacecraft was to be launched on an Atlas V rocket from the Cape Canaveral spaceport in Florida. 24 hours later, the “Starliner” was scheduled to dock with the International Space Station ISS. The space capsule was to bring 180 kilograms of cargo to the station, including supplies for the current ISS crew. “Starliner” would then have returned to Earth with around 250 kilograms of cargo, including air tanks.

    A first unmanned test flight of the “Starliner” capsule failed in 2019 due to software problems. The spacecraft was unable to reach the ISS at the time and returned to Earth prematurely.

    Most recently, the date for the second flight to the ISS, originally scheduled for last Friday, had to be postponed until today. The reason was an incident when the new Russian laboratory module “Nauka” docked with the ISS. However, the weather forecast was not ideal for today’s attempt either.

    Space business promises stable sales

    For Boeing, the success of the “Starliner” is of enormous importance because, in addition to the aviation division with its aircraft fleet, the defense, space and security division, in which the “Starliner” project is also located, is expected to ensure stable earnings for the group in the future. The division already generates around a third of the group’s revenues. And in contrast to the aircraft division, which saw dramatic declines last year due to Corona, Boeing came through the crisis well with tanker aircraft for the military and commercial satellites and services in this area.

    The “Starliner” project goes back to a decision made by the US space agency NASA ten years ago. NASA had discontinued its shuttle program due to high costs and after two accidents, was subsequently dependent on Russian rockets to get to the ISS. In order to become more independent from Russia again, the US government under then-President Barack Obama commissioned Elon Musk’s SpaceX company and the aviation giant Boeing to build space shuttles.

    First cargo, then astronauts

    SpaceX has already brought people to the ISS. In May 2020, two astronauts flew to the ISS for the first time on board the “Crew Dragon” capsule. In April 2021, four astronauts were on board for the trip to the station. As soon as the unmanned “Starliner” flight is successful, the Boeing capsule will also be able to transport people after further tests at the end of the year.

    NASA deliberately wants to be able to rely on several companies for its space flights. A recent dispute over a NASA contract for a lunar lander showed that other competitors are also putting out feelers for billion-dollar contracts in space travel: Blue Origin, with Bezos at the helm, wanted to snatch a contract away from SpaceX and even offered to cover development costs running into billions. A complaint by Blue Origin against the NASA contract to SpaceX with the US General Audit Office GOA was rejected a few days ago.

    Ten years after commissioning

    First manned Starliner flight to the ISS

    After years of delays, the Starliner space capsule from the US company Boeing is set to fly into space with humans for the first time. The rocket will launch early Tuesday morning from the Cape Canaveral spaceport.

    Ten years ago, then NASA chief Charles Bolden announced a program with which the USA would again conduct its own flights to the International Space Station. The idea was not to be dependent on Russia when it came to transporting people and goods to the ISS after the end of the Space Shuttle era.

    At this time, the US space agency did not want to develop and build the space shuttles itself, but commissioned the aircraft manufacturer Boeing and the company SpaceX owned by tech billionaire Elon Musk. From that point of view, Boeing seemed to have the advantage with its “Starliner” spacecraft. The company received an order worth more than four billion dollars, SpaceX 2.6 billion. But things did not go smoothly at Boeing, and there were crises, problems and delays.

    Difficulties with the tests

    During a first unmanned test in 2019, the Starliner did not even arrive at the ISS due to software problems. A second unmanned test flight was successful in 2022, but then numerous problems arose again, which further delayed a planned manned test flight.

    Now, on Tuesday morning at 4:34 a.m. Central European Summer Time, the first manned Starliner flight is scheduled to take off from the Cape Canaveral spaceport in the US state of Florida, with NASA astronauts Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams on board. The capsule is to be launched into space by an Atlas V rocket developed by Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

    Boeing’s Starliner is a partially reusable spacecraft consisting of a crew capsule approximately three meters high and a service module, designed to carry four crew members and, unlike the Crew Dragon, lands on Earth rather than on water.

    “We are ready, the spaceship is ready.”

    The spacecraft is expected to arrive at the ISS on Wednesday, where Wilmore and Williams are expected to stay for about a week. “It almost feels unreal,” said 58-year-old Williams, who has already been on board the ISS twice, at a press conference beforehand. “We wouldn’t be here if we weren’t ready,” said her 61-year-old astronaut colleague Wilmore, who has also been in space twice. “We are ready. The spacecraft is ready and the team is ready.”

    SpaceX won the race

    Meanwhile, competitor SpaceX has long since overtaken Boeing. In 2020, its Crew Dragon successfully undertook its first manned test to the ISS, and since then astronaut transports have become routine. There are currently eight regular crew members on the space station, having arrived there with the Dragon.

    ISS crew

    Back on Earth

    After almost half a year in space, part of the crew of the International Space Station is back on Earth. The four astronauts, from the USA, Russia and Japan, landed in the sea off the coast of Florida.

    A space capsule has brought two women and two men back to Earth from the International Space Station ISS. On board a “Crew Dragon” of the private space company SpaceX, Nicole Mann and Josh Cassada from the USA, the Russian Anna Kikina and the Japanese Koichi Wakata landed in the sea off the coast of the US state of Florida, as live images from the US space agency NASA showed.

    “That was an amazing ride,” Mann radioed after landing. “We’re glad to be home again,” said the commander of “Crew-5” – the fifth NASA flight of a “Crew Dragon” spacecraft with crew. Around 20 hours earlier, the space capsule had undocked from the ISS after the crew had to wait several days for the return flight due to bad weather.

    First joint mission since attack on Ukraine

    The “Crew-5” was launched in October from the Cape Canaveral spaceport. It was the first joint launch of NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut from American soil since the beginning of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine.

    Also on board the ISS are the Russian cosmonauts Sergei Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin as well as NASA astronaut Frank Rubio and the crew of “Crew-6”, which arrived just a few days ago and consists of the Americans Stephen Bowen and Warren Hoburg, the Russian Andrei Fedyaev and the Emirati Sultan al-Nijadi.

    The “Starliner” breakdown list has gotten longer

    Boeing does not only develop airplanes, but also spaceships. But the “Starliner” is particularly impressive due to its mishaps. The launch date for the first manned flight has been postponed again.

    The list of problems with the “Starliner” is long. In December 2019, it was supposed to fly to the International Space Station (ISS) for the first time without a crew. But the spacecraft never arrived at the ISS during this flight. Due to a software problem, the “Starliner” used up too much fuel too early, was unable to reach the ISS’s altitude and had to abort its flight after two days.

    The repeat of the flight in August 2021 ended even before it began. The humid weather in Florida had caused valves in the fuel lines to corrode, so that several of these valves were jammed before takeoff. The “Starliner” rolled from the launch site back to the workshop.

    It was only on the third attempt that the “Starliner” reached the ISS, two and a half years late. However, there was no crew on board for all of these flights. The first flight with people on board was actually planned for this summer – but the American space agency NASA and the Boeing company announced at a press conference that the launch would be postponed until spring 2024.

    Parachutes and faulty adhesive tapes

    What is not working and is preventing the one remaining, crucial qualification flight of the “Starliner” to the International Space Station are, on the one hand, fastenings for the parachutes and, on the other hand, adhesive tape. The fiberglass tape used to bundle electrical cables in the “Starliner” has proven to be flammable under very specific circumstances – this was not clearly noted in the aerospace engineers’ databases. The tape was installed in good conscience. Now it has to be removed.

    With the parachutes, it turned out that connections between the parachute lines and the return capsule could be overloaded.

    The design and material of the connection on the parachutes have already been changed. Whether this solves the problems will be determined during a test landing after being dropped from a high altitude, but this cannot be taken place until November. The unexpectedly flammable tape has already has been largely removed from the upper half of the space capsule or covered with non-flammable material. It will take a few more weeks to replace it in the lower half of the “Starliner.”

    “Starliner” still a loss-making business for Boeing

    If the next flight, the first with a crew, is successful, Boeing would be the second company alongside SpaceX to have the license to transport space personnel to the ISS. With an estimated 50 to 60 million dollars per passenger, this would be a lucrative business.

    But it remains to be seen whether Boeing will ever make a profit with the “Starliner” with these impressive ticket prices. NASA agreed a fixed price of five billion dollars with Boeing for the development of the “Starliner” – but the many breakdowns and delays have resulted in costs of more than six billion dollars for Boeing.

    NASA sticks to project

    Nevertheless, the project will not be abandoned – not only because the next, decisive flight could make the project a success and make all the mishaps forgotten. But also because NASA started its commercial spacecraft program more than ten years ago so that one day it would no longer be dependent on just one type of spacecraft from one manufacturer.

    Although SpaceX has been reliably bringing new crew to the ISS every six months, NASA believes that splitting this business between the two companies would make sense. Memories are still fresh of the years when the USA had no spaceships of its own to transport men and women to the ISS because the space shuttles were unusable and had to buy flight opportunities from the Russian space agency.

  • Spaceship costs Boeing hundreds of millions of dollars

    Spaceship costs Boeing hundreds of millions of dollars

    On the second completely private mission, a four-person crew set off for the International Space Station ISS for around ten days. For the first time, a woman from Saudi Arabia is on her way into space.

    A four-person crew flew to the International Space Station ISS on a rocket from the US company SpaceX. Former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, ex-racing driver John Shoffner, Saudi Arabian astronaut Rayyanah Barnawi and her colleague Ali Alqarni flew into space on board a “Dragon” capsule. They are expected to stay in the ISS for around ten days as part of the “Axiom-2” mission and carry out scientific experiments.

    Passengers have to pay themselves

    The trip is organized by the private space company Axiom Space in cooperation with NASA and SpaceX. According to media reports, the passengers will each pay around 50 million euros for the trip. Axiom Space, founded in 2016 in Houston, Texas, by former NASA manager Michael Suffredini and Iranian-American entrepreneur Kam Ghaffarian, sees itself as a future major player in the space market.

    In April 2022, “Axiom-1” was the first completely private mission to the ISS. At that time, the Spanish-American astronaut Michael López-Alegría, the US entrepreneur Larry Connor, the Israeli entrepreneur Eytan Stibbe and the Canadian investor Mark Pathy flew to the ISS. There had been individual space tourists on the ISS several times before, but the “Axiom-1” mission was the first completely private crew.

    First woman from Saudi Arabia in space

    Researcher Barnaui is the first woman from Saudi Arabia to take part in a space flight. She and Air Force pilot Ali al-Karni are also the first representatives of their country to do so since 1985, when a Saudi prince took off on a space flight aboard the space shuttle Discovery as part of NASA’s space program.

    The mission was led by former NASA astronaut Whitson, who now works for SpaceX. The former first commander of the ISS held her country’s record for the longest total stay in space at 665 days. Also on board was US businessman John Shoffner.

    “Starliner” astronaut flight postponed

    Astronauts are due to be launched to the ISS on Boeing’s “Starliner” a long time ago. Now the spacecraft will not be ready for its first manned flight until March next year at the earliest.

    Contrary to plans, the Starliner spacecraft will not take off for its first astronaut flight this year. The space capsule will not be ready for launch until early next year at the earliest. This was announced by the US space agency NASA and the US aircraft manufacturer Boeing at a press conference.

    Boeing’s program manager Nappi explained: “According to current plans, we expect to be ready with the spacecraft at the beginning of March.”

    However, this does not mean that there is already a launch date for early March. This will have to be set at a later date and will depend on the seats on the ISS and the capabilities of the United Launch Alliance company, which is supplying the rocket for the launch of the spacecraft.

    More glitches in final test phase

    New technical problems arose during the final test phase in the spring: with the parachute system and with an adhesive tape that proved to be flammable. This was actually intended to protect the capsule’s wiring.

    The first manned flight of the spacecraft was supposed to take place in July. This date had also been postponed several times before.

    So far, the only unmanned test flights have been successful

    Almost ten years ago, NASA commissioned Boeing to bring astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) and back to Earth. This was achieved for the first time in 2022 – but only unmanned. At the time, NASA spoke of a “milestone”.

    Spaceship costs Boeing hundreds of millions of dollars

    NASA wants to use Boeing’s space capsule as an alternative to SpaceX’s Dragon space capsule for transporting to the ISS. The ongoing delays to the first flight of the “Starliner” have already cost Boeing an additional $257 million, as the US aircraft manufacturer announced last month The “Starliner” is a partially reusable spacecraft that

    consists of a capsule for the crew and a service module that can be launched with a rocket. Once approved for transporting people, it can transport up to four crew members to the ISS.

    “Starliner” back on Earth

    Test successfulBoeing’s “Starliner” was actually supposed to transport astronauts to and from the ISS a long time ago. But the project is plagued by a number of problems and is far behind schedule. Now a test flight has been successful for the first time.

    The “Starliner” spacecraft, developed by Boeing on behalf of the US space agency NASA, has completed its first successful test flight to the International Space Station ISS. After around four days at the ISS, the unmanned spacecraft undocked from the space station on Wednesday as planned and landed a few hours later in the US state of New Mexico, Boeing and NASA announced.

    It was an important test for the crisis-ridden “Starliner”. The spacecraft is intended to transport astronauts to the ISS in the future – as an alternative to SpaceX’s “Crew Dragon” space capsule.

    Project plagued by problems for a long time

    However, due to a number of problems, the project is far behind schedule. The “Starliner” is supposed to have been transporting astronauts to and from the ISS long ago, but during an initial test in December 2019, the spacecraft did not make it to the ISS – partly due to a problem with the automatic ignition of the engines.

    Last year, the tests were postponed several times – and then the “Starliner” finally had to go back to the workshop due to valve problems.

    NASA speaks of “milestone”

    NASA described the successful launch from Cape Canaveral Spaceport last week as a “milestone.” The spacecraft was carrying over 300 kilograms of cargo, including supplies for the ISS crew.

    The Starliner is a partially reusable spacecraft consisting of a capsule for the crew and a service module that can be launched by rocket. Once approved for human transport, it can carry up to four crew members to the ISS.

    Boeing’s “Starliner” launch aborted again

    Boeing’s “Starliner” was supposed to transport astronauts to the ISS long ago. But the project is plagued by crises. Now another launch has had to be canceled.

    A planned first manned test flight of the crisis-ridden spacecraft “Starliner” was aborted again shortly before takeoff. Around three minutes before the space capsule was due to take off from the Cape Canaveral spaceport in the US state of Florida, there was initially a temporary stop, then the launch was canceled entirely by the US space agency NASA.

    The reasons for this were initially unclear. There was probably an error in a computer system on the ground, the space agency said.

    “Starliner” as an alternative to the “Dragon” capsule

    The test flight was aborted shortly before takeoff about a month ago and has been postponed again and again since then. NASA astronauts Barry Wilmore and Suni Williams were actually supposed to set off for the International Space Station ISS on board the “Starliner” and stay there for about a week. According to NASA, there would be further launch opportunities on Sunday and on June 5 and 6. However, it was initially unclear whether one could be used.

    NASA plans to regularly use the “Starliner” alongside SpaceX’s “Dragon” capsule to transport astronauts to the space station. The “Dragon” capsule from multi-billionaire Elon Musk’s company has been transporting astronauts to the ISS on behalf of NASA for several years. The “Starliner” program, on the other hand, has suffered a number of setbacks in recent years.

    SpaceX mission

    Launch of giant rocket “Starship” postponed

    Things are not going well with the “Starship” of Elon Musk’s space company SpaceX: After the explosion during the first test flight, there are now also problems with the second attempt at the largest rocket in the world.

    The second test of the largest rocket system ever built in the history of space travel has been postponed from Friday to Saturday. A drive unit on a control surface – a so-called grid fin actuator – still needs to be replaced, wrote Elon Musk on the short message service X, formerly Twitter, which he owns. “That’s why the launch has been postponed to Saturday.” A grid fin is a component that is intended to stabilize the rocket when it returns to Earth and when it lands. It is brought into position by the actuator.

    SpaceX announced shortly afterwards that a 20-minute launch window for the “Starship” would open at 2 pm Central European Time on Saturday. Musk’s space company also sent a noise warning to the population of the surrounding Cameron County in the US state of Texas: There may be a loud noise from the 33 engines. What one hears on site also depends on the weather and other conditions. The second launch attempt was actually scheduled for Friday afternoon Central European Time.

    Requirements of the supervisory authority before second launch

    The “Starship” took off for an unmanned test launch for the first time in mid-April – and four minutes later, it staggered and exploded and broke apart. Billionaire Musk, whose company SpaceX developed and built the “Starship” rocket system, did not see this as a setback, but rather as an “exciting test launch”. Musk had always been stressed that another attempt with another “Starship” should follow as soon as possible.

    However, after an investigation, the US aviation authority FAA called for numerous improvements to be made before the next test launch could take place. SpaceX has now announced that it has implemented a number of changes. The FAA then gave the green light. The company has now “met all the necessary criteria, particularly with regard to safety, the environment and financial responsibility,” the authority explained.

    Environmentalists have nevertheless opposed the second launch attempt. “We fear that the second launch will once again cause significant environmental damage,” said Jared Margolis, a lawyer for the environmental organization Center for Biological Diversity. A lawsuit is pending against the FAA because of the first “Starship” launch attempt. Several environmental organizations accuse the agency of not having properly assessed the environmental risks posed by the new giant rocket.

    “Starship” to bring astronauts to the moon

    The “Starship” – consisting of the approximately 70-meter-long “Super Heavy” booster and the approximately 50-meter-long upper stage, also called “Starship” – is intended to enable manned missions to the Moon and Mars. The system is designed so that the spacecraft and rocket can be reused after returning to Earth.

    The system, which is about 120 meters long in total, will be able to transport well over a hundred tons of cargo in the future. NASA wants to use the “Starship” to bring astronauts to the moon. SpaceX hopes to reach Mars one day.

    The “Starliner” breakdown list has gotten longer

    Boeing does not only develop airplanes, but also spaceships. But the “Starliner” is particularly impressive due to its mishaps. The launch date for the first manned flight has been postponed again.

    The list of problems with the “Starliner” is long. In December 2019, it was supposed to fly to the International Space Station (ISS) for the first time without a crew. But the spacecraft never arrived at the ISS during this flight. Due to a software problem, the “Starliner” used up too much fuel too early, was unable to reach the ISS’s altitude and had to abort its flight after two days.

    The repeat of the flight in August 2021 ended even before it began. The humid weather in Florida had caused valves in the fuel lines to corrode, so that several of these valves were jammed before takeoff. The “Starliner” rolled from the launch site back to the workshop.

    It was only on the third attempt that the “Starliner” reached the ISS, two and a half years late. However, there was no crew on board for all of these flights. The first flight with people on board was actually planned for this summer – but the American space agency NASA and the Boeing company announced at a press conference that the launch would be postponed until spring 2024.

    Parachutes and faulty adhesive tapes

    What is not working and is preventing the one remaining, crucial qualification flight of the “Starliner” to the International Space Station are, on the one hand, fastenings for the parachutes and, on the other hand, adhesive tape. The fiberglass tape used to bundle electrical cables in the “Starliner” has proven to be flammable under very specific circumstances – this was not clearly noted in the aerospace engineers’ databases. The tape was installed in good conscience. Now it has to be removed.

    With the parachutes, it turned out that connections between the parachute lines and the return capsule could be overloaded.

    The design and material of the connection on the parachutes have already been changed. Whether this solves the problems will be determined during a test landing after being dropped from a high altitude, but this cannot be taken place until November. The unexpectedly flammable tape has already been largely removed from the upper half of the space capsule or covered with non-flammable material. It will take a few more weeks to replace it in the lower half of the “Starliner.”

    “Starliner” still a loss-making business for Boeing

    If the next flight, the first with a crew, is successful, Boeing would be the second company alongside SpaceX to have the license to transport space personnel to the ISS. With an estimated 50 to 60 million dollars per passenger, this would be a lucrative business.

    But it remains to be seen whether Boeing will ever make a profit with the “Starliner” with these impressive ticket prices. NASA agreed a fixed price of five billion dollars with Boeing for the development of the “Starliner” – but the many breakdowns and delays have resulted in costs of more than six billion dollars for Boeing.

    NASA sticks to project

    Nevertheless, the project will not be abandoned – not only because the next, decisive flight could make the project a success and make all the mishaps forgotten. But also because NASA started its commercial spacecraft program more than ten years ago so that one day it would no longer be dependent on just one type of spacecraft from one manufacturer.

    Although SpaceX has been reliably bringing new crew to the ISS every six months, NASA believes that splitting this business between the two companies would make sense. Memories are still fresh of the years when the USA had no spaceships of its own to transport men and women to the ISS because the space shuttles were unusable and had to buy flight opportunities from the Russian space agency.

    Possible ISS replacement

    Airbus joins private space station projectAirbus is getting involved in the development of a private space station that could replace the ISS. The aircraft manufacturer will work with the US company Voyager Space to advance the Starlab project.

    The European aircraft manufacturer and aerospace company Airbus is participating in a private space station that could replace the aging International Space Station ISS. Airbus wants to participate in the development, construction and operation of the Starlab station of the US company Voyager Space.

    Starlab to be sent into orbit in 2028

    A joint venture is planned, as Voyager Space and Airbus announced. According to current plans, Starlab is to enter orbit in 2028.

    The space station will provide space for various research laboratories and will therefore play an important role in space research. In addition to Voyager Space, the Hilton hotel group is also involved as a partner in the planning of the residential quarters.

    Replacement of the ISS by several space stations

    The ISS is gradually dismantled and crashed at the end of the decade. It is becoming apparent that there will be several stations instead of one huge structure.

    The Voyager company Nanoracks received $160 million from the US space agency NASA at the end of 2021 to develop Starlab. Airbus has already commissioned Voyager Space in January to provide technical support and know-how for the project.

    Longest ISS mission

    Astronauts set an involuntary recordThe astronauts Rubio, Prokopyev and Petelin were actually supposed to stay in space for 180 days. But a glitch delayed their return home. US astronaut Rubio is now especially looking forward to hugging his children.

    US astronaut Frank Rubio and the two Russian cosmonauts Sergei Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin have landed safely back on Earth – after more than a year in space.

    The three astronauts, who had launched to the ISS on September 21 last year, landed in the steppe of the Central Asian Republic of Kazakhstan on Wednesday in the Soyuz MS-23 space capsule. The Russian space agency Roscosmos showed photos and videos of the picture-perfect landing. The astronauts were reportedly doing well.

    With 371 days in space, it was the longest mission on the International Space Station ISS, according to Roscosmos. However, it was not actually planned that way. The astronauts were supposed to return after six months, but damage to their Soyuz capsule prevented them from returning home as planned. A replacement spacecraft had to be found, which meant that the length of their stay was doubled.

    Only two cosmonauts have spent longer periods in space: Valery Polyakov spent a total of 437 days in space from 1994 to 1995, and Sergei Avdeev spent 379 days from 1998 to 1999. Both had worked on the ISS’s predecessor station, Mir.

    US record

    Meanwhile, American astronaut Frank Rubio set a US record. Due to the involuntary extension of the ISS mission, Rubio stayed in space for 371 days instead of the planned 180 days, thus beating the record of his compatriot Mark Vande Hei.

    “It’s good to be home,” said Rubio. If he had known in advance how long the mission would be, he would not have agreed. “Hugging my wife and children will be the most important thing, and that’s probably what I’ll focus on in the first few days,” said the military doctor and helicopter pilot.

    Damage to the Soyuz capsule

    A leak was discovered in the trio’s Soyuz MS-22 capsule in December, which experts believe was caused by the impact of a micrometeorite. This had damaged the outer coating and a cooling unit. Both Roscosmos and NASA assured at the time that they saw no danger to the operation of the ISS. Due to the damage, the return planned for March was postponed. The Soyuz MS-23 was sent to the ISS from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan as a replacement spacecraft.

    International Space Station

    New crew launched at the ISS

    A four-person crew under the command of American Jasmin Moghbeli is on its way to the International Space Station ISS. The astronauts bring different personal backgrounds with them on board.

    This morning, a four-person crew took off from the spaceport of the US space agency NASA toward the International Space Station ISS. Just under 24 hours later, they are expected to dock with the ISS around 400 kilometers above the Earth. The launch was originally planned for Friday, but was then postponed by a day.

    Until now, the US space agency NASA has always had two or three of its astronauts on each of the SpaceX flights from the USA to the ISS. This time it is just NASA astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli. In addition to the commander, Andreas Mogensen from the European Space Agency ESA, the Japanese Satoshi Furukawa and the Russian Konstantin Borissow are also on board. They took off on board the SpaceX capsule “Dragon” from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, powered by a Falcon 9 rocket.

    Different experiences

    Moghbeli was born in Germany and grew up in New York. Her parents fled Iran during the 1979 revolution. She flew combat helicopters in Afghanistan for the US military. Now she is embarking on her first space flight. She wanted to show Iranian girls that they could have big goals, she said before the flight. “Believing in yourself is something very powerful.”

    Mogensen used to work on oil drilling platforms off the West African coast. He is sure that this experience led him to be selected as Denmark’s first astronaut. Furukawa worked as a surgeon for ten years before becoming an astronaut. He and Mogensen have both been on the ISS. Borissov is new to space travel. He runs a freediving school in Moscow and is a judge for the sport. Persian stew, Danish chocolate and Japanese fish will be among the dishes the astronauts will take to the ISS.

    Seventh rotation of the IS crew since 2020

    A few days after docking, the “Dragon” capsule is scheduled to bring another four-person crew, consisting of the Americans Stephen Bowen and Warren Hoburg, the Russian Andrei Fedyaev and the Emirati Sultan al-Nijadi, back to Earth. A total of seven people are currently on the International Space Station.

    According to NASA, the current mission is the eighth manned flight of the “Dragon” spacecraft from multi-billionaire Elon Musk’s SpaceX company. The aircraft manufacturer Boeing was also hired for the mission, but has not yet transported any astronauts. Due to problems, the Boeing crew capsule will remain on the ground until 2024.

    According to NASA, this is the seventh rotation of the ISS crew since 2020. The new crew members will conduct research in space for six months. Since the start of the Russian offensive in Ukraine a year ago, the International Space Station is one of the few areas in which Russia and the USA still work together.

    On the far side

    China announces successful landing of lunar probeThe mission is considered a milestone in Chinese space travel: Another probe has landed on the far side of the Moon. “Chang’e 6” is intended to collect soil and rock samples there and bring them back to Earth.

    According to state media, the Chinese lunar probe “Chang’e-6” has successfully landed on the far side of the moon. As the state news agency Xinhua reported, citing the Chinese space agency, “Chang’e-6” landed as planned in the so-called South Pole-Aitken Basin, a huge lunar crater.

    The probe is intended to collect rock samples from the far side of the Moon for the first time and bring them to Earth – it would be the first time in human history that this could be achieved.

    China launched its next mission to explore the far side of the moon at the beginning of May. A carrier rocket carrying the probe named after the Chinese moon goddess took off from the Wenchang spaceport on the southern Chinese island of Hainan on May 3. The technically complex mission is expected to last a total of 53 days. The probe is expected to collect a total of 2 kilograms of rock and soil samples in the South Pole-Aitken Basin and carry out other experiments.

    First landing in 2019

    China also wants to become a major power in space travel and is investing billions in its space program. And with success: in 2019, the People’s Republic succeeded in landing a probe on the far side of the moon for the first time with “Chang’e-4”. In the follow-up mission “Chang’e-5” in 2020, China became the third country after the USA and the Soviet Union to bring moon rocks to Earth – albeit from the front of the moon. Now China wants to be the first country to analyze samples from the far side of the moon.

    Scientists have high hopes for research into the far side of the Moon because its surface is not covered in lava. It could therefore be easier to access rocks that could provide information about the formation of the Earth’s satellite.

    China reaches for moon rocks

    It will be one of China’s most difficult space flights to date: a spacecraft is to bring moon rocks to Earth for the first time in 40 years. The mission is seen as China’s forerunner to Mars.

    China has launched an unmanned spacecraft to land on the moon. The flight is intended to bring rock samples back to Earth for the first time in more than four decades. The “Long March 5” rocket took off early Tuesday morning (local time) from the space station in Wenchang on the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The spacecraft, named after the Chinese moon goddess “Chang’e”, is expected to bring a lander to the moon on Sunday to collect rock and drill samples.

    If the return is successful, China would be the third spacefaring nation to succeed in such a venture, after the USA and the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s. The spacecraft is to land in the volcanic region named after the German astronomer Karl Rümker (1788-1862). It is located in the “Ocean of Storms” in the upper left part of the side of the moon facing the earth.

    Two weeks time

    The mission is considered one of the most complicated that China’s space program has ever undertaken: for the first time, a Chinese ascent stage would launch from the Moon, take rock samples with it and perform a docking maneuver in the orbit of the Earth’s satellite before the return capsule flies back to Earth. The landing module can only stay on the lunar surface for one lunar day – about 14 Earth days – because it cannot be heated and cannot withstand the freezing cold nights.

    The 8,200 kilogram spacecraft consists of four modules: the orbiter with the return capsule and the lander with the ascent stage. After touching down on the lunar surface, the lander will use a long arm to collect around two kilograms of lunar rock and samples from boreholes up to two meters deep and store them in a chamber.

    Researchers hope that the samples will provide important new insights into the volcanic activity and history of the Moon. The USA’s Apollo missions brought back around 380 kilograms of moon rock. The Soviet Union collected a total of 300 grams – most recently with the unmanned “Luna 24” mission in 1976, when around 170 grams of moon dust were brought to Earth.

    Reaching for Mars?

    If the mission is successful, it would be a major step forward for China’s space program. Some experts believe it could pave the way for a similar mission to Mars or even a manned mission to the Moon.

    Astronomer Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics pointed out that China has already landed on the moon twice with the “Chang’e 3” and “Chang’e 4” missions. With a “Chang’e 5” test mission in 2014, it proved that it can navigate back to Earth and land a capsule there. Now it just needs to show that it can take samples on the moon and launch from there again. “That’s why I’m pretty optimistic that China can pull it off,” said McDowell.

    China is pursuing an ambitious space program with missions to the Moon and Mars as well as the construction of its own space station. In January 2019, China became the first spacefaring nation to land “Chang’e 4” on the relatively unexplored far side of the Moon. A rover was deployed to continue exploring the surface.

    Numerous moon missions planned

    The renaissance of manned space travel63 years ago today, the first human flew into space – the first manned mission to the Moon followed a few years later. Now several countries are planning to return to Earth’s satellite, first with probes and rovers, then with humans.

    The USA, China, Russia, India – several countries want to return to our Earth’s satellite. The race to the moon is in full swing. It’s about prestige, science and economic interests. 55 years after NASA flew astronauts to the moon for the first time, the return is imminent. In 2025, the USA wants to orbit the moon with four astronauts on the “Artemis II” mission. The manned moon landing is planned for 2026.

    “Astronautical space travel is currently experiencing a renaissance,” says ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher. Humans will be irreplaceable in the exploration of the Moon, together with robotics and artificial intelligence: “You need a good combination of both. A human exploring the terrain on the Moon, for example, can see more than a robot with all imaginable sensors and cameras. They think much further, much more holistically, in other words more holistically, than all the software and robots we can program. Apart from that, an astronaut can cover much greater distances to explore areas than a rover.”

    Robots lack scientific intuition

    ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst refers to the American “Viking” probes that flew to Mars in the 1970s to clarify, among other things, the question of whether there is water on the Red Planet.

    He explains: “Traces of water have actually been found, but we now know that water ice is often found directly beneath the Earth’s surface. If the excavator had dug just a few centimeters deeper, it would probably have found bare ice.” Robots simply do not have the scientific intuition that trained astronauts have.

    NASA plans new lunar vehicles

    NASA has just announced that it has awarded three space companies the contract to build a lunar vehicle. It is still unclear who will win the contract, but one thing is clear: the so-called LTV (lunar terrain vehicle) will be able to travel over the lunar surface with and without astronauts and cover long distances. The NASA press release states:

    The LTV will be able to cope with the extreme conditions of the Moon’s south pole and will feature advanced technologies for energy management, autonomous driving, and state-of-the-art communications and navigation systems. Crews will use the LTV to explore, transport scientific equipment, and collect samples from the lunar surface much further than they could go on foot, allowing for greater scientific yield.

    The first man in space

    63 years ago today, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first person to orbit the Earth. His flight in the Vostok 1 space capsule lasted one hour and 48 minutes. Since then, generations of astronauts have flown into space. With the construction of the International Space Station (ISS) in 1998, a certain routine set in. Long-term stays of six months are common practice. However, the planned moon flights now present the astronauts with completely different challenges.

    Astronaut Gerst says that the planned moon flights will open a completely new chapter in astronautics: “The planned moon missions are complex, with many logistical steps. You have to land there and are trapped on the moon by its gravity. The environment is hostile to life, with temperatures well below minus 100 degrees on the night side and well over 100 degrees on the day side, plus space radiation and vacuum.”

    In contrast to the “Apollo” missions, the “Artemis” missions are now flying to the moon to conduct sustainable science in international cooperation. The first moon flights between 1969 and 1972 were national solo efforts by NASA and took place during the Cold War. USA against the Soviet Union – back then it was about prestige and the fight for spheres of influence, with astronauts as heroes of the respective nation.

    Reasons for returning to the moon

    Why do so many nations actually want to go back to the moon? After the Apollo missions, NASA stopped the program. Today it is clear: the moon is more than just a collection of dead rock.

    ESA Director General Aschbacher explains: “With lunar exploration, completely new economic sectors will develop in the future. Mineral resources will be mined. There is ice on the moon, which can be converted into rocket fuel or oxygen for astronauts. It’s about setting up a camp in which to conduct research. Research and economic aspects will go hand in hand. We don’t yet know what the moon has to offer.”

    For him, there is no question that Europe must also participate in the exploration of the moon in order not to be left behind technologically and to remain competitive: “What is at stake is how Europe positions itself in the next ten, twenty years, as a continent that develops technology. We have excellent technologies in the automotive sector, in mechanical engineering, in many other areas, and space travel will be a domain of the future.”

    Space travel is expensive

    Aschbacher justifies the immense costs of space travel and explains that the ESA is not only investing money in the training and flights of astronauts:

    “We must not forget that ESA spends about half of its money on Earth observation, navigation and telecommunications. Our focus is on planet Earth. NASA has focused more on exploration, i.e. on astronaut space travel, to the Moon and Mars. This shows the slightly different priorities of the space agencies.” He calculates that the ESA budget in 2024 will be around 7.8 billion euros – money that will be used to provide a lot of technology, but also information about the Earth, the universe and the existence of humanity.

    Astronautic space travel is considered THE symbol of exploration in space. ESA astronaut Gerst is aware of the responsibility that his work is financed with public money. He compares the moon missions with the exploration of Antarctica: “In the beginning, it was about putting up a flag at the South Pole, with great political support. Then there was little research for decades, until there was a big push in the middle of the 20th century because people realized that there were scientific reasons to explore Antarctica. We are now facing this second wave on the moon.”

    Preparing for the moon

    Gerst does not yet know when or if he will be one of the astronauts who will fly to the moon. He says that he is head of the European astronaut corps for the new generation of ESA astronauts, but that he is preparing himself for a possible moon mission:

    “I have regular training sessions planned to prepare myself and my colleagues for such missions. For example, working in a space suit or flight training. We also practice conducting science in difficult environments, such as in the Antarctic, in underground caves or in volcanic areas.”

    The moon in the distance?

    On Monday, the US space probe “Peregrine” set off for the moon, but it will never arrive there. Now the next setback: NASA is postponing a manned flight to the moon. What is the status of the current missions?

    Everything started well. The launch of “Peregrine” on Monday was supposed to usher in a “new era of space travel to the moon and beyond,” the spokeswoman said during the lift-off broadcast. The rocket worked perfectly – but its payload, the probe on top of it, did not.

    Their on-board engines are acting up so much that they make it impossible to land on the lunar surface.

    German lunar experiment delivers data

    But even without the crowning achievement of a successful landing on the moon, the mission is already a success for the German Aerospace Center (DLR). There, in the Department of Radiation Biology, Thomas Berger is pleased with the progress of the mission so far.

    The DLR contributed to an experiment called M42 – named after the Orion Nebula in the night sky – to the “Peregrine” mission. “It measures the radiation on the way to the Moon and is now sending this measurement data back to Earth,” Berger said. The instruments will probably be managed until Thursday, before “Peregrine” runs out of fuel. Even without landing, at least this part of the mission was successful.

    But the bad news from the moon is still not letting up: Yesterday, the US space agency NASA announced that it does not want to send four astronauts around the moon at the end of the year – for the first time since the 1970s. Just over a year ago, everyone saw the test flight of “Artemis I”, said Bill Nelson. “It was so successful that further tests are necessary,” was the strange logic of the NASA boss.

    No need for haste

    Amit Kshatriya from NASA’s Exploration Systems Division explains exactly what went wrong: “During the return to Earth, more material came loose from the heat shield of the Orion crew capsule than the engineers had expected. We are currently investigating the cause and hope to have completed our investigations in the spring.”

    “Artemis I” took place in December 2022. Since then, NASA has been studying the heat shield. And studying. And studying. NASA chief Nelson justifies these delays: “In order to give the Artemis teams more time, we will not launch ‘Artemis II’ this year, but towards the end of next year. The follow-up mission “Artemis III” is not scheduled to bring people to the lunar south pole until the end of 2026.

    Other countries overtake the USA

    Delays have lasted several years for all sorts of reasons that a private space company like SpaceX could have possibly resolved within weeks. Elon Musk’s company plans to send its new Starship into space for the third time next month.

    After these recent delays, it’s more questionable whether the next people on the moon will have a Stars and Stripes flag in their luggage – but not for Bill Nelson: “I’m not worried that China could land on the moon before us,” says the NASA administrator.

    China has a very ambitious program. And sending people to the moon before the USA would be a huge PR coup. “But I don’t think they’ll manage it.” Neither the Americans nor the Chinese are next anyway: On January 19, the unmanned Japanese probe SLIM will land on the moon – or not.

    Third test flight unsuccessful

    SpaceX reports loss of giant rocket

    The third test flight of the gigantic SpaceX rocket “Starship” has also failed. It was apparently destroyed during its re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere. One day it will transport people to the moon and Mars.

    The largest rocket system ever built was also unable to complete a third test flight. The unmanned “Starship” was made into space after launching from SpaceX’s Starbase spaceport in Boca Chica, Texas. However, it was destroyed upon re-entering the Earth’s atmosphere, according to commentators on the live stream from the space company SpaceX.

    A test flight lasting around an hour was planned, after which both rocket stages were to land in the sea. The lower rocket stage also attempted to land, but then failed, as the commentators reported: “We lost the rocket stage, so we have to look at the data again.”

    More goals achieved than in previous tests

    The upper stage of the rocket was the first to enter space, where it probably remained for about half an hour before being lost during re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere. This means that more goals were achieved in the third test than in the previous two.

    In the first test last April, the entire rocket system exploded after just a few minutes. In the second test in November, the two rocket stages were separated and the upper one continued to fly, but both exploded separately shortly afterwards. SpaceX always emphasizes that the aim of the tests is to collect data.

    Manned missions to the Moon and Mars

    In the future, the system, which will be around 120 meters long, will be able to transport well over 100 tons of cargo. It consists of a booster around 70 meters long and an upper stage around 50 meters long and is intended to enable manned missions to the Moon and Mars. The US space agency NASA also plans to use “Starship” for its Artemis moon landing mission.

    The system is designed so that the spacecraft and rocket can be reused after returning to Earth. This should make space missions cheaper.

    SpaceX to build new lunar module

    It was the first manned flight to the Earth’s satellite since 1972: The US space agency NASA has commissioned Tesla founder Elon Musk’s company SpaceX to build a lunar module.

    NASA continues to rely on Tesla founder Elon Musk for manned space travel. The US space agency commissioned Musk’s company SpaceX to build the next lunar module for flights to the Moon – the first since the Apollo missions 50 years ago.

    SpaceX is already using the Falcon 9 to transport astronauts to the International Space Station ISS for NASA. The special thing about Musk’s lunar module “Starship” is that all parts of the carrier system are reusable, which will significantly reduce the costs of each individual flight in the medium term.

    The price was apparently also an argument for NASA: According to the Washington Post, SpaceX made the cheapest offer at just under three billion dollars – and thus beat the competition, including “Blue Origin”, the space company of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

    Test flights not yet successful

    However, there is still a lot to do before the “Starship” can actually fly people to the moon as part of the Artemis mission. The prototype’s previous test flights either ended in a crash landing or the lander exploded in mid-air.

    It remains unclear when the first manned flight to the moon since 1972 will take place. Former US President Donald Trump had set NASA a deadline of 2024. The government of his successor Joe Biden is currently having the schedule reviewed again.

    Editor’s note: A previous version mentioned a moon rocket that Musk is supposed to build for NASA. However, this is the part of the rocket that is supposed to land on the moon’s surface at the end, i.e. the lunar module.

    Life like on the Red Planet

    Humans have reached Mars: The Red Planet is located in Texas and measures 160 square meters. With the help of a one-year simulation, NASA wants to prepare for a real Mars mission – even if it is still a long way off.

    An area of ​​​​red sand that is intended to simulate the Martian landscape. Four bedrooms, a living room, several work units as well as a mini gym, a vertical farm for growing vegetables and a medical area. Video recordings from Reuters and other media provide insights into the so-called Mars Habitat Simulator, in which four volunteers are to simulate life on the Red Planet for a year.

    NASA wants to investigate how people behave in total isolation far away from Earth, says the head of the research project, Grace Douglas, to the news agency Reuters.

    The “Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog” (CHAPEA) project was developed as a simulation of a one-year stay on Mars. The intention is to observe a crew in isolation with many restrictions. “We want to understand how these restrictions affect their health and performance,” Douglas said.

    Mars on 160 square meters

    The nearly 160 square meter “Mars Dune Alpha” comes from the 3D printer and was built in a converted hangar at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. The experiment is intended to prepare for a future Mars mission, says NASA scientist Suzanne Bell: “In addition to the isolation and the confined space, we are also studying how the four test subjects get along with each other. When you live in a confined space with three other people, it can be exhausting.”

    The four paid volunteers will have to live under realistic Mars conditions. This means they will not have much water, no fresh air, very little luggage and very limited contact with friends and family – just as people might live on a Mars station in the distant future.

    Walking on Mars via Virtual Reality

    The only thing that cannot be simulated in “Mars Dune Alpha” is the gravitational pull of Mars, says Douglas in an interview with the television station Fox 13 News.

    A special zone has been set up for this purpose, adds NASA human performance engineer Alex Baughman: “Here we have created a space where we can take space or Mars walks using virtual reality and carry out simulated Mars experiments. For example, taking geological samples, removing dust from space suits or solar panels, or making repairs to the house.”

    Volunteers must meet astronaut requirements

    The four people who will volunteer to be locked in the Mars house for 365 days will be announced in the next few weeks. According to NASA, they must meet the standard requirements for astronauts.

    In case there is a ruckus in the Mars house or if one of them gives up, two replacement astronauts are ready to step in in an emergency. The simulation is set to begin in June, with two more experiments to follow. Things will get serious in 2040. NASA boss Bill Nelson is already dreaming of sending a manned spacecraft to Mars by then at the latest.

    “Pizza and pastries are forbidden”

    What can ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer expect from his six-month stay on the ISS? Before his launch with SpaceX, he told tagesschau.de what he plans to do on board – and what he will have to do without.

    tagesschau.de: Mr. Maurer, your start date has been postponed several times. How did you spend the waiting time?

    Matthias Maurer: In the past year and a half, I have hardly had the opportunity to go on holiday due to the intensive training in preparation for my mission. So I have used the waiting time to relax a bit. Of course, we are continuing to train: we are doing sports, practicing various tasks again, such as “catch and capture”, where we virtually operate a robot arm and similar things. Of course, we are also going through various procedures in detail. A few days ago, we had an emergency training session on how to behave if something were to happen after the Dragon capsule took off, such as a fire breaking out or a loss of pressure in the Dragon.

    As a crew we obviously spend a lot of time together, but we also had the opportunity to see our families a few times. When things got more or less boring, we started collecting plastic waste on the beach. We have a so-called beach house that is available to us and there is a private section of the beach that is not open to the public. The beach house sounds great, by the way, but it is more of a conference center. The mood within the crew is still good and couldn’t be better. We are of course looking forward to things getting started soon. But we are not allowing frustration or impatience to build up. We quickly came to an agreement as a crew.

    tagesschau.de: Do you also feel some excitement before the start?

    Matthias Maurer: Not yet, actually. I think the excitement comes when the hatch is closed and we hear the rocket being filled. That makes a lot of noises, and we’ve been prepared for that. But of course we haven’t really heard or felt it yet. I’ve already been in my capsule once. We had to test whether the spacesuit fits with the connections in the capsule.

    Weightlessness – also a problem for astronauts

    tagesschau.de: Despite the long preparation: Are you afraid that you won’t be able to cope with the weightlessness in space?

    Maurer: According to statistics, 85 percent of my colleagues cannot tolerate space. So I am actually quite sure that I will not be able to tolerate space for the first three days either. It would be like being on a ship with a bit more sea than you are used to. But we take medication for motion sickness, which means I will be able to dampen it down. With a bit of luck, I will be one of the 15 percent who laugh and say: It’s not that bad. But I am prepared to suffer for a few days. That is part of it.

    tagesschau.de: The weather has to be right for your launch. And not just in Florida, but also over the Atlantic west of Ireland. Why is that?

    Maurer: We’ll take off from Cape Canaveral and then fly parallel to the US coast towards Canada. Then we’ll continue towards England and Ireland. And when we reach the airspace over England, we’ll be in orbit. But if we abort the launch, we’ll fall into the sea. That’s why the weather has to be good at the landing sites where we’re planning to abort the launch. Even in the best conditions in Florida, the launch could be delayed due to bad weather in the emergency landing areas.

    Experiments that can only be carried out in space

    tagesschau.de: Let’s talk about your work in space, such as the experiments. Why is it so important to experiment in space?

    Maurer: Gravity here on Earth causes us to have physical effects that we don’t have in space. If you take water and pour some oil over it, for example, an oil film will float on top of the water here on Earth because the oil film is lighter. In space, the oil film doesn’t float, but behaves differently because of the weightlessness. We want to look into this and study additional interactions between the water and the oil, such as surface energy or interface effects. I have a lot of experiments with me in my luggage, and we’re also doing combustion experiments, for example. Because combustion also takes place differently in space than on Earth.

    tagesschau.de: On the ISS you also practice for long-term stays on the Moon and Mars. Can you give us an example?

    Maurer: Bringing resources to the ISS is already expensive. You can assume that every liter of water that we fly up costs around 10,000 euros – for transport costs and the entire logistics chain that goes with it. If we had to bring water to the moon, that is even more expensive. That means: every drop of water that we can actively save helps to make the mission possible and sustainable. So we need devices that create closed cycles. The water that we drink on the ISS becomes urine, which is then purified again to make drinking water. At the moment we recycle almost 90 percent of the water – that’s very good, but it’s not 100 percent yet. We have to get there.

    “People on the ground should become part of my mission.”

    tagesschau.de: You have been asked a lot in recent weeks what you are taking with you to the ISS. So let’s turn the question around: What would you like to take with you but are not allowed to?

    Maurer: We have a few holidays up there, Christmas and my birthday. A glass to toast with something you drink at a party would have been nice. But we’re not allowed to take that with us. Even something crunchy, like pizza or pastries, is forbidden – because of the crumbs. If they don’t fall on the floor, we could inhale them. Then they would be a real danger.

    tagesschau.de: Your German predecessor on the ISS always shared his mission with us through photos he posted from space. Do you plan to do the same?

    Maurer: When I applied to become an astronaut in 2008, I had no idea that social media would become so popular. Now it’s part of the astronauts’ job. Luckily, I have a team that supports me. But of course I have to ” feed” this team from above: I have to and will create images and video clips and put the emotions I have up there into words. I do this not only because I have to, but also because photography is one of my hobbies and hopefully the people on the ground will also become part of my mission.