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HomeGlobal NewsFour citizen astronauts blast off on a three-day journey, orbiting the Earth

Four citizen astronauts blast off on a three-day journey, orbiting the Earth

During its three-day journey, the capsule will be orbiting the Earth once every 90 minutes at a speed of over 17,000mph and an altitude of 360 miles

The first all-civilian crew ever to orbit the Earth have blasted off on their ground-breaking mission.

The Dragon capsule contains four citizen astronauts and was launched atop of a SpaceX Falcon 9 from the Kennedy Space Centre, which resides in Florida.

The launch is the latest giant leap within a new era of commercial space travel.

One of those aboard the mission, billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman, paid an undisclosed fee to SpaceX for the chance to fly with three others.

During its three-day journey, the capsule will orbit the earth once every 90 minutes at a speed of more than 17,000mph and an altitude of 360 miles – even higher than the orbiting International Space Station and Hubble Space Telescope.

Isaacman conceived the mission, named Inspiration4, to raise awareness and support for the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, a leading paediatric cancer centre in Memphis, Tennessee. He has pledged $100m (£72m) personally.

This comes after billionaire Jeff Bezos thanked his Amazon employees, as well as customers for paying for his leisure voyage to space, but his remarks have since prompted criticism from many, including politicians and celebrities.

One of his crewmates, Hayley Arceneaux, was diagnosed with bone cancer as a 10-year-old. Now 29 and a physicians’ assistant at that cancer hospital, she is the youngest American ever to visit space and the first with a prosthesis.

At one point a golden retriever stuffed toy mascot, representing the assistance dogs used at St Jude, could be seen floating around the capsule in the weightlessness of space.

Although the craft is being controlled remotely from the ground, it does have a designated pilot. Sian Proctor, once a NASA astronaut candidate, is proud of her role aboard.

“There have been three black female astronauts that have made it to space and knowing that I’m going to be the fourth means that I have this opportunity to not only accomplish my dream, but also inspire, and inspire the next generation of women and girls of colour,” she said.

One person not on board is SpaceX founder Elon Musk, but the mission is being seen as the next stage of fulfilling his ambition to reach new targets in space.

“If we’re going to go to the moon again and we’re going to go to Mars and beyond, we’ve got to get a little outside of our comfort zone and take that next step in that direction,” said Isaacman.

This summer has seen billionaire space tourism rivals Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos reach the edge of space in vehicles they have spent millions building.

But experts say this orbital mission, with SpaceX already the frontrunner in the business of commercial space travel, is of greater significance.

This comes after, the founder and CEO of Amazon is set to step down from running the company as it reported record revenues for its core Christmas quarter for 2020, topping $100bn (£73.1bn) for the first time due to help from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Retired NASA astronaut Ron Garan Jr, who flew missions to the International Space Station aboard the Space Shuttle, told Sky News: 

“There are no passengers on this mission, they’re not there for minutes, they’re there for days, they have actual mission objectives that they’re trying to achieve, so it’s an order of magnitude more challenging and more risky.

“But this is the dawn of a new era of space travel.”

And that, according to planetary scientist Tanya Harrison, is good news for everyone who wants to go to space. “It is a huge step in showing it’s not just billionaires and their employees going into space but regular people and they’re going farther than we have in decades.”

The crew have spent five months training for the mission. If all goes according to plan, the capsule is due to splashdown in the Atlantic in three days.

Eve Cooper
Eve Cooper
I've been writing articles and stories for as long as I can remember and in the past few years I've had the fortune of turning that love & passion for writing into my job :)

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