Space travel: Before the arrival of the “Starliner”: “Dragon” has to move to the ISS

Space travel
Before the arrival of the “Starliner”: “Dragon” has to move to the ISS

For the first time, the “Starliner” will dock with the space station with astronauts on board. photo

© Uncredited/NASA/dpa

There will be an ISS premiere next week: For the first time, the “Starliner” will dock with astronauts on board at the space station. A “Crew Dragon” now had to make room and repark.

Before the arrival of the “Starliner” planned for Wednesday, the ship is currently at the International Space Station ISS docked “Dragon” capsule has to make room. The NASA astronauts Matt Dominick, Mike Barratt and Jeanette Epps as well as the cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin first undocked the capsule from the ISS, after which it then independently reconnected to the station at another docking point, as NASA announced.

It was the 28th such relocation operation in the history of the ISS and the fourth with a “Dragon” capsule, it said. Dominick, Barratt, Epps and Grebenkin – the so-called “Crew 8” – arrived at the ISS in March with the “Crew Dragon” and are scheduled to fly it back to Earth in the fall.

First of all, next Wednesday, the crisis-plagued spaceship “Starliner” is scheduled to arrive at the ISS manned for the first time – and that needs the docking station that the “Dragon” previously occupied. NASA astronauts Barry Wilmore and Suni Williams are scheduled to set off on the Starliner’s first manned test flight early next week.

The “Starliner,” developed and built by Boeing, completed a successful unmanned flight to the ISS for the first time in May 2022 and spent four days there. In the future, it will be used as an alternative to SpaceX’s “Crew Dragon” capsule to transport astronauts to the ISS. However, due to a number of problems, the project is well behind schedule.

dpa

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