SpaceX’s upcoming Crew-9 mission to the Worldwide Area Station (ISS) has been postponed due to the arrival of Tropical Storm Helene. Initially set to launch on September twenty sixth from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Area Drive Station, the launch is now delayed by a minimum of two days. The tropical storm is anticipated to escalate right into a Class 3 hurricane and make landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast. Consequently, NASA and SpaceX are aiming for a brand new launch window on Saturday, 28 September, at 1:17 p.m. EDT (1717 GMT), topic to climate circumstances.
Precautionary Measures in Place
Though the storm will affect Florida’s panhandle, its extensive attain has led to warnings about robust winds and heavy rain on the jap coast, the place Cape Canaveral is positioned. NASA’s assertion highlighted the preparations in place, together with the precautionary return of the rocket-capsule combo to the hangar. The {hardware} was moved to the launch pad on 24 September, and mission rehearsals are ongoing forward of the rescheduled launch date.
Crew Particulars for the Mission
The Crew-9 mission will ship NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov to the ISS, the place they are going to stay for about 5 months, returning in February 2025. The Falcon 9 rocket will carry the Crew Dragon capsule, named Freedom, and is usually geared up to hold 4 astronauts. Nonetheless, two seats on this flight have been reserved for Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, who’re scheduled to return from the ISS after arriving in June aboard Boeing’s Starliner capsule.
The launch, as soon as rescheduled, will mark SpaceX’s ninth operational astronaut mission below NASA’s Industrial Crew Program. Whereas Boeing can also be part of this programme, delays in its Starliner capsule’s crewed missions have but to be resolved.