SpaceX launches crew of private astronauts to space station
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CAPE CANAVERAL – SpaceX has launched four private astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS), including the first woman from Saudi Arabia to travel to space.
The crew lifted off atop a Falcon 9 rocket on Sunday evening from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida. The mission, operated by Axiom Space, is the second of four human spaceflight launches that SpaceX is set to handle for the company.
With plans to build its own private space station in the future, Axiom is conducting the series of crewed flights to the ISS to prepare for sending people to its own orbiting vehicle. Axiom and SpaceX, the Elon Musk-run company known formally as Space Exploration Technologies Corp, sent the first all-private crew to the ISS in April 2022.
The latest mission, called Ax-2, is commanded by Dr Peggy Whitson, a former National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) astronaut and now the director for human spaceflight at Axiom. Joining her are two mission specialists from Saudi Arabia: fighter pilot Ali Alqarni and biomedical researcher Rayyanah Barnawi.
Trained pilot John Shoffner, a car racing enthusiast who made money in the fibre-optic telecommunications industry, is the mission’s pilot. Mr Shoffner paid an undisclosed sum to fly on this mission. One seat on a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft is estimated to run at US$55 million (S$74 million), according to Nasa’s inspector-general.
The crew members docked with the ISS on Monday and will spend eight days at the station. They are set to do more than 20 experiments while on board, before returning to Earth.
The next mission, Ax-3, is expected to launch no earlier than November. Axiom Space is also building its first habitable space module. BLOOMBERG

