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Why Elon Musk's SpaceX is launching astronauts for Nasa

Technology

Elon

Musk's SpaceX is flying people to and from the International Space

Station (ISS), using the Crew Dragon vehicle. But why is Nasa paying a

private company to launch its astronauts?To understand the background to the Crew Dragon missions, we need to go back almost 20 years to a tragic accident.On

1 February 2003, the space shuttle Columbia broke apart while

re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. All seven astronauts aboard perished

in the disaster.The loss of Columbia and its crew was the trigger for a dramatic shift in direction for America's human spaceflight programme.On

14 January 2004, President George W Bush announced that the space

shuttle would be retired after completion of the International Space

Station (ISS). In its place, America would build a new vehicle capable

of returning astronauts to the Moon.The

following year, then-Nasa chief Mike Griffin announced that the

completion of the ISS would, for the first time, open up commercial

opportunities for the routine transportation of cargo and astronauts to

low-Earth orbit. This,

Griffin reasoned, was required to free up enough funds to achieve a

Moon return. Nasa established a Commercial Crew & Cargo Program

Office (C3PO) to oversee the effort.At

the time, SpaceX, the company started by South African-born

entrepreneur Elon Musk was just a few years old. Musk had lofty

ambitions about bringing down the cost of spaceflight by re-using space

hardware and settling humans on Mars."SpaceX

was founded to make life multi-planetary," says Jessica Jensen,

director of Starship mission hardware and operation at SpaceX.But,

she adds: "We were a very small company for several years. So we had to

look for opportunities - how do you go from being a small company to

actually putting people into orbit. When Nasa came out with the need to

fly cargo to and from the International Space Station, we jumped on

that."SpaceX

was shortlisted for evaluation under the Nasa cargo programme in 2006.

But by 2008, SpaceX and Tesla, the electric car manufacturer in which

Musk had invested, were running low on cash. Musk was faced with an

impossible choice: "I could either split the funds that I had between

the two companies, or focus it on one company - with certain death for

the other," he told Business Insider in 2013."I

decided in the end to split what I had and try to keep both companies

alive. But that could have been a terrible decision that could have

resulted in both companies dying."Fortunately,

on 23 December 2008, Nasa awarded SpaceX with a $1.6bn contract to

ferry cargo and supplies to the ISS. Describing his reaction, Musk said:

"I couldn't even maintain my composure, I was like: 'I love you guys'."The

company's Dragon 1 capsule could carry cargo and supplies, but not

humans. Nevertheless, it represented a milestone for the company.In

November 2008, Barack Obama had been elected president. His

administration kicked off a review of the human spaceflight programme,

which led to the cancellation of his predecessor's plan to return to the

Moon (known as Constellation).However,

the Obama administration favoured the continued commercialisation of

space, backing the development of private crew vehicles. But it would

take time and, after the space shuttle was retired, Nasa had to fill the

gap by paying Russia tens of millions of dollars per seat to fly its

astronauts to the ISS on the Soyuz vehicle, which launches from Baikonur

in Kazakhstan.Congress

was initially sceptical about the Commercial Crew Program and did not

provide sufficient funds at first. But Charles Bolden, the former

astronaut who took over from Griffin as Nasa chief under Obama,

persisted and eventually secured the support he needed.From

their initial $50m investment in the programme in 2010, the space

agency whittled several competing companies down to two - SpaceX and

Boeing - in 2014.Since then, they have been refining and testing their spacecraft designs. In

March 2019, SpaceX performed a triumphant launch of the Crew Dragon

without astronauts. Using automated procedures, the capsule successfully

approached and docked with the space station. It

was carrying a mannequin called Ripley - after Ellen Ripley, the

protagonist in the Alien movies - decked out with sensors to measure the

G forces experienced during flight, particularly the launch and return

phases.Despite

this success, and others along the way, it hasn't always been plain

sailing for SpaceX. In 2016, a Falcon 9 rocket blew up on the launch

pad. And in April 2019, a Crew Dragon capsule exploded during a

so-called static fire test on the ground. No one was hurt in either

event. The spacecraft was also having problems with the parachute system designed to bring it back safely to Earth. These mishaps, along with earlier funding shortfalls for the Commercial Crew Program, had introduced delays to an original timeline that would have seen SpaceX launch crew to the ISS in October 2016. Frustrated

by the hold ups and the time SpaceX was spending on its Starship

project to build a super heavy-lift launch vehicle, Nasa administrator

Jim Bridenstine tweeted:Bridenstine sent the tweet the night before a major Starship media event where Musk was due to speak.The

next day, Musk shot back with a dig at the agency's own timelines.

Asked about the tweet by CNN, Musk answered: "Did he (Bridenstine) say

Commercial Crew or SLS?"The

SpaceX founder was referring to Nasa's Space Launch System rocket -

designed to launch humans to the Moon - which has also been hit by

delays and cost overruns.Musk's

company wasn't alone in experiencing challenges, however. A timing

anomaly prevented Boeing's spacecraft - the CST-100 Starliner - from

docking with the space station during an uncrewed test flight last year.However,

a successful in-flight test of the Crew Dragon's launch abort system in

January 2020 helped clear the way for the historic first lift-off with

astronauts from Florida's Kennedy Space Center on 30 May.Nasa's Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken spent two months aboard the ISS before returning to Earth safely in the capsule.In

the post-launch press conference, both Bridenstine and Musk struck more

conciliatory tones, in contrast to the tensions over the Starship

project."If

you would have told me then (eight months prior, when he sent the

tweet) that we would be right here today, I don't know that I would have

believed it," said Bridenstine."Since

that day, Elon Musk and SpaceX have delivered on everything Nasa has

asked them to deliver on - and at a speed that we never would have

guessed."The

Nasa chief also congratulated SpaceX on its safety culture. Musk

replied: "Nasa made us way better than we would otherwise have been -

and of course, we couldn't even have got started without Nasa." 

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