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Polaris Dawn reaches 870 miles above Earth; as crew preps for first private EVA
Polaris Dawn reaches 870 miles above Earth; as crew preps for first private EVA
by Clyde Hughes
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 11, 2024
The Polaris Dawn mission on Tuesday reached an orbit of 870 miles above the Earth's surface, the farthest humans have been away from the planet since the 1970s.

It marked the farthest orbit of Earth since the Gemini missions during the Apollo era.

The private space mission, paid for by billionaire Jared Isaacman reached the milestone orbit on a SpaceX Dragon capsule.

SpaceX mission specialists Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon made history as the farthest any women had been in space.

Gillis, Menon, Isaacman -- the mission's commander -- and pilot Scott Poteet are scheduled to take part in the first-ever private spacewalk in history on Thursday as they will test new spacesuits designed by SpaceX.

The Dragon spacecraft will be guided to the lower orbit, where all the air will be taken out and the door opened for the spacewalk. The capsule does not have an airlock, which means the entire spaceship will fill the vacuum of space.

"Dragon and the Polaris Dawn crew have completed six orbits of Earth at 1,400 km [870 miles]." SpaceX said on X. "Over the next five hours, Dragon will perform four burns to lower itself to an orbit of 190 x 174 km in preparation for Thursday's spacewalk."

SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew set for historic private spacewalk
Washington (AFP) Sept 11, 2024 - After trekking deeper into space than any humans in the last half-century, a pioneering private crew is set to make history Thursday with the first-ever spacewalk by non-professional astronauts.

The SpaceX Polaris Dawn mission, led by fintech billionaire Jared Isaacman, launched early Tuesday from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, reaching a peak altitude of 870 miles (1,400 kilometers).

That's more than three times higher than the International Space Station, in a region of space called the inner Van Allen radiation belt --a zone teeming with dangerous, high-energy particles.

Now, with their Dragon spaceship's elliptical orbit reduced to an apogee of 458 miles, the crew of four are gearing up for the mission's centerpiece: an audacious extravehicular activity (EVA) scheduled for 0623 GMT on Thursday, with a backup window on Friday.

SpaceX will livestream the event starting an hour earlier on its website.

- 'Bit of a dance' -

Outfitted in sleek, newly developed SpaceX suits with heads-up displays, helmet cameras, and advanced joint mobility systems, Isaacman and his crewmate Sarah Gillis, a SpaceX engineer, will take turns peeking out from a hatch structure affectionately dubbed "Skywalker," fitted with hand and footholds.

"It'll look like we're doing a little bit of a dance," Isaacman quipped during a recent press conference. What they're actually doing, he explained, is stress testing their next-generation suit to inform future design evolution.

They won't, however, float away from the ship on a tether, as early space farers like Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov and NASA's Ed White did in 1965 -- nor for that matter use jetpacks to fly away untethered as Space Shuttle astronauts did on three missions in 1984. Rather, they will hold on to the outside of the spacecraft as it whizzes around the Earth at thousands of miles per hour.

Nevertheless, "the risk is greater than zero, that's for sure, and it's certainly higher than anything that has been accomplished on a commercial basis," former NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe told AFP.

"This is another watershed event in the march toward commercialization of space for transportation," he added, likening the crewmates to early aviators who paved the way for today's aviation industry.

- First of three Polaris missions -

Since the Crew Dragon capsule lacks an airlock, the entire crew -- including mission pilot Scott Poteet, a retired US Air Force lieutenant colonel, and another SpaceX engineer, Anna Menon -- will be exposed to the vacuum of space for around two hours.

The actual time Isaacman and Gillis spend holding on to the spaceship will be around 15 to 20 minutes each.

All four underwent more than two years of training in preparation for the landmark mission, logging hundreds of hours on simulators as well as skydiving, centrifuge training, scuba diving, and summiting an Ecuadoran volcano.

Beyond their spacewalk, the crew will test laser-based satellite communications between the spacecraft and the vast Starlink satellite constellation.

They'll also carry out 36 scientific experiments, including tests on contact lenses with embedded microelectronics to monitor changes in eye pressure and shape in space.

Polaris Dawn is the first of three missions under the Polaris program, a collaboration between Isaacman and SpaceX.

Financial terms of the partnership remain under wraps, but Isaacman, the 41-year-old founder and CEO of Shift4Payments, reportedly poured $200 million of his fortune into leading the 2021 all-civilian SpaceX Inspiration4 orbital mission.

The final Polaris mission aims to be the first crewed flight of SpaceX's Starship, a prototype next generation rocket that is key to founder Elon Musk's ambitions of colonizing Mars.

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