- SpaceX and
NASA have delayed the launch its fourth NASA astronaut crew to the International Space Station until Wednesday, citing a storm system over the Northeast. - The fourth crewed flight had been set to launch on Halloween but is now slated for a Wednesday blast off.
SpaceX and NASA have pushed back their planned launch of a fourth crew of
The launch, originally set to send a rocket called Endurance streaking above the Florida skies on Halloween, is now slated for Wednesday, the company and NASA announced Saturday.
"NASA and
"Weather conditions along the ascent corridor are expected to improve for a Nov. 3 launch attempt," the space agency added.
-NASA Commercial Crew (@Commercial_Crew) October 30, 2021
SpaceX, the rocket company founded by Elon Musk, has been shuttling NASA astronauts to and from the ISS for six-month shifts. The crews have also included astronauts from the space agencies of Europe and Japan.
The upcoming mission, called Crew-3, consists of NASA astronauts Tom Marshburn, Raja Chari, and Kayla Barron, as well as European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Matthias Maurer.
If all goes according to plan, Endurance will blast off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center Wednesday and the astronauts will spend 24 hours enjoying the views and preparing for arrival as the spaceship lines up with the
Astronauts on the Crew Dragon and the ISS will then conduct a nearly two-hour sealing and leak-checking process before opening the hatch that connects the station to the spaceship. Then Crew-3 will float into the space station. The seven people currently on the ISS will likely crowd around to greet them - a reunion that's often full of broad smiles and upside-down hugs.
In the weeks after the Crew-3 arrival, the SpaceX mission that's currently on the ISS, Crew-2, will return to Earth. The exact date for their return journey has not yet been announced.