SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Homecoming Friday May Be Toughest Part of Its Mission

By   Spaceflight 

SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft approaches the International Space Station on March 3, 2019, on the capsule's uncrewed Demo-1 mission.

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft approaches the International Space Station on March 3, 2019, on the capsule’s uncrewed Demo-1 mission.
(Image: © NASA)

SpaceX’s new astronaut taxi will return to Earth tomorrow morning (March 8), but a safe return is no slam dunk.

Indeed, the fast and fiery descent through our planet’s atmosphere may be the most difficult part of Demo-1, the Crew Dragon capsule’s maiden mission to the International Space Station (ISS), according to SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk.

“I see hypersonic re-entry as probably my greatest concern,” Musk said on Saturday morning (March 2) a few hours after Crew Dragon launched atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, kicking off the uncrewed Demo-1 shakeout flight.

Related: SpaceX Dragon Crew Demo-1 Test Flight: Full Coverage

He mentioned Crew Dragon’s parachute system and backshell. Both are relatively unproven; they’re quite different from the versions employed by the cargo variant of Dragon, which has flown 16 robotic resupply runs to the ISS for NASA.

“That could potentially cause a roll instability on re-entry,” Musk said. “I think it’s unlikely; we’ve run simulations a thousand times. But this is a possibility.”

Similarly, he added, “Will the parachutes deploy correctly? Will the system guide Dragon 2 to the right location and splash down safely?”

That location is the Atlantic Ocean, not far off the Florida coast. The cargo Dragon comes down in the Pacific, but SpaceX wants to get the crewed variant back to its processing facilities on Florida’s Space Coast quickly, company representatives have said.

SpaceX Crew Dragon Hatch Opened, Astronauts Enter
Crew Dragon is scheduled to leave the ISS on Friday at 2:31 a.m. EST (0731 GMT) and splash down around 8:45 a.m. EST (1345 GMT). You can watch these events live here on Space.com when the time comes, courtesy of NASA TV. 

SpaceX has been developing Crew Dragon under a $2.6 billion NASA contract the company signed in 2014 — a different deal than the one structuring the cargo Dragon’s resupply runs. Boeing also signed a NASA commercial-crew contract, getting $4.2 billion to build and fly a capsule called the CST-100 Starliner.

Crewed flight could come soon for both of these spacecraft. SpaceX plans to launch two astronauts to the ISS this July on a test flight called Demo-2, provided Demo-1 ends well and a subsequent uncrewed “abort test” putting those SuperDracos into action goes as planned.

Starliner could launch on its version of Demo-1 as early as next month and fly a crewed demonstration mission to the ISS by August, Boeing representatives have said.

Editor’s note: You can watch SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Demo-1 on Space.com, courtesy of NASA TV. Today, March 7, NASA will webcast the hatch closing of Crew Dragon at 12:15 p.m. EST (1715 GMT). On Friday, live coverage begins at 2 a.m. EST (0700 GMT) for undocking and Earth return operations. Splashdown is scheduled for 8:45 a.m EST (1345 GMT).

Mike Wall’s book about the search for alien life, “Out There” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate) is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook

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