The first all-civilian mission on a multiday trip to space looks to launch from Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday night.
SpaceX set the five-hour window for liftoff from 8:02 p.m. to 1:02 a.m. Thursday.
The Inspiration4 crew, made up of billionaire mission commander Jared Isaacman, pilot Sian Proctor, medical officer Hayley Arceneaux and mission specialist Chris Sembroski, will ride in the SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience atop a Falcon 9 rocket and blast off from KSC’s Launch Pad 39-A.
The four completed a full dress rehearsal Sunday for the launch.
The plan for the trip is to orbit the Earth at 335 miles altitude for three days before returning for a splashdown landing off the coast of Florida in either the Atlantic or Gulf of Mexico.
The Space Force’s 45th Weather Squadron reports a 80% chance for favorable conditions Wednesday night with thick clouds and precipitation as the primary concerns. A 24-hour backup window shows an 70% chance of favorable conditions.
The four civilians will be the first to launch from Florida in SpaceX’s Dragon, and second crew to ride in Resilience, which ferried up the Crew-1 astronauts to the International Space Station back in November 2020 before spending six months attached to the ISS and returning to Earth this past May.
Instead of going to the ISS, the Inspiration4 mission will just remain in low-Earth orbit, giving its crew a fantastic view of space, orbiting at higher altitude than the space station. Since the Crew Dragon won’t be docking with anything, SpaceX has replaced that mechanism with a glass cupola window for even better views.
So far, SpaceX has used two Crew Dragons for its three missions with passengers, with the other being Crew Dragon Endeavour, which is currently parked at the ISS with the Crew-2 astronauts.
SpaceX plans to quickly refurbish Resilience for a planned Crew-3 mission to launch as early as Oct. 3.
Inspiration4 is the first planned use of Crew Dragon for civilian flights, but future missions call for civilians to fly and spend time on the ISS as well, similar to how Russian Soyuz flights took civilians starting in 2001 with Dennis Tito’s trip to the station.
Isaacman, 38, the billionaire founder and CEO of credit card processing company Shift4 Payments, paid SpaceX an undisclosed sum to command the four-person crew while the three other passengers were chosen or won their seats as part of the mission’s goal of raising funds for the Memphis, Tennessee-based St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which is known for treating childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Isaacman has donated $100 million to St. Jude and the mission looks to raise a total of $200 million.
“From the start of this mission, we’ve been very aware of how lucky we are and how fortunate we are to be part of this history that SpaceX is creating right now … We set out from the start to deliver a very inspiring message, certainly you know what could be done up in space, and the possibilities there, but also what we can accomplish here on Earth, and chose to do that through an interesting crew selection process, of which I feel like that objective — to assemble a very inspiring crew, who all have so many amazing qualities and contributing so many interesting firsts to this mission — has been accomplished,” Isaacman said in a Tuesday press conference. “We also chose to do it through the largest fundraising effort in the history of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, acknowledging the real responsibilities we have here on Earth in order to earn the right to make progress up in space, and I feel like we’re well on our way to achieving that objective as well.”
Isaacman discussed how the mission is more than just tourism, and that the crew will also be performing science, such as the push on his part to fly to a higher altitude to help contribute to SpaceX’s longer-term goals.
“We’ve been going to the space station for some time, and there’s just unbelievable science and research and just great contributions are coming out there, but if we’re going to moon again and we’re going to go to Mars and beyond then we’ve got to get a little outside of our comfort zone and take that next step in that direction,” he said. “That was the rationale. … At our orbital altitude, it is a higher radiation profile than would be observed at the space station, and the greater the understanding we can have on that, the better planning we can make for future long-duration missions like going to Mars.”
The experiments planned for the flight include collecting swabs to learn about microbiomes, performing ultrasounds to evaluate fluid shift that could help with some vision-related issues astronauts have seen, cognitive test, glucose levels and studying radiation levels.
It will be the third major landmark in the burgeoning space tourism industry this year with both Virgin Galactic’s flight of founder Richard Branson and others aboard its VSS Unity craft and Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos’ trip on the New Shepard rocket. Both those flights were quick trips up to 50 miles for Virgin Galactic and 100 km for Blue Origin, which allow for a short time of weightlessness and views of the curvature of the Earth before heading back for landing. After the success of Branson’s flight, Virgin Galactic said it would charge new customers $450,000 per flight. Blue Origin has yet to announce its price point.
The SpaceX mission is much more complicated, and comes with a higher price tag. The company is working with Axiom Space for the first ISS mission in 2022, with a price tag of $55 million for each passenger. SpaceX offers future civilian flights at undisclosed costs for trips to low-Earth orbit, the International Space Station, lunar orbit and Mars, the latter of which will be reliant on the successful development of Starship.
The first civilian flight to the moon by SpaceX is also already in the works, aiming for a 2023 flight. Japanese entrepreneur Yusaku Maezawa has bought all the seats on the Starship flight, which will be a week-long trip to the moon and back. The mission has been dubbed dearMoon, and Maezawa opened up a contest to take along eight passengers.
But first up is Inspiration4, which has had a whirlwind buildup including a commercial played during the 2021 Super Bowl that helped prompt more than 7,200 people to donate to St. Judes and be among those considered for one of the seats. The mission is also the subject of a Netflix documentary series.
Inspiration4 marks the first of what could be a much more common occurrence, with as many as six civilian flights a year eventually, according to Benji Reed, Senior Director of Human Spaceflight Programs at SpaceX.
“There’s nothing really that limits our capability to launch,” he said. “It’s about having rockets and Dragons ready to go and having everything in the manifest align with our other launches.”