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SpaceX delivers private Axiom crew to the space station, carrying Saudi astronauts

  • SpaceX delivered another quartet of astronauts to the International Space Station on Monday morning.
  • Axiom Space booked the roughly week-long trip, known as the Ax-2 mission, to the ISS with Elon Musk’s company.
  • The private flight carries two Americans and two Saudis, including the first woman to fly in space from the Arab nation.

SpaceX delivered another quartet of astronauts to the International Space Station on Monday morning, on a private flight that included government astronauts from Saudi Arabia as the Arab kingdom leverages U.S. companies to expands its ambitions in space. 

Axiom Space booked the roughly week-long trip, known as the Ax-2 mission, to the ISS with Elon Musk’s company. SpaceX launched the four people Sunday evening from Florida. Its Falcon 9 rocket launched from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center and the company’s Crew Dragon capsule, named Freedom, reaching the ISS about 16 hours later.

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Ax-2 is commanded by retired NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, who has spent more time in space than any other American or woman, and piloted by businessman and auto racer John Shoffner, who purchased a seat on the flight through Axiom. Whitson is also Axiom’s director of human spaceflight.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia bought the final two seats on Axiom’s mission, with Rayyanah Barnawi and Ali al-Qarni flying as mission specialists. Barnawi is the first Saudi woman to fly in space.

The mission will feature a busy slate of research and technology experiments, with over 20 different science investigations.

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For SpaceX, the Ax-2 mission is the company’s 10th human spaceflight. The company has flown seven government-booked crew missions and three private flights since launching astronauts for the first time in May 2020.

The mission featured the first time SpaceX returned a Falcon 9 booster to land back near the launch site, rather than on a ship in the ocean, after a crew launch. The company continues to expand the technical capabilities of its fleet.

This was also the second launch for the company’s reusable Freedom capsule, which previously carried NASA’s Crew-4 mission on a six-month mission to and from the ISS.

Axiom and SpaceX have not disclosed financial details about the Ax-2 mission. NASA has previously disclosed a SpaceX crew launch costs about $55 million per seat, so the price for these private missions is expected to be high. Axiom has booked four crewed flights from SpaceX to date.

Although SpaceX is providing the rocket and capsule, Axiom is leading the mission’s management from training to the return to Earth.

Source: Business - cnbc.com

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