
SpaceX is about to launch one of the most critical space missions in the company's 17-year history.
After years of delays, NASA and its partners have given SpaceX a "go" to launch its new spaceship for astronauts, called Crew Dragon (or Dragon 2), for the first time ever.
Elon Musk's rocket company seeks to show that it can safely fly astronauts in its commercial spaceships. NASA, for its part, describes the mission as a "critical step" in resurrecting the ability to launch astronauts from US soil in American spaceships.Crew Dragon is scheduled to launch atop a Falcon 9 rocket on Saturday at 2:49 a.m. ET from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. No people will fly inside the spaceship for this first demonstration - just cargo and sensor-laden dummy.
The mission is called SpaceX Demo-1 in formal circles, and if all goes well, the spaceship will travel to the International Space Station, dock with the $150 billion laboratory, then return to Earth a few days later.
"Demo-1 is a flight test, it absolutely is, although we view it also as a real mission, a very critical mission," Kirk Shireman, who manages the space station program at NASA's Johnson Space Center, said during a press briefing about the upcoming launch. "The ISS still has three people on board, and so this vehicle coming up to the ISS for the first time has to work. It has to work."
Here's what to expect and when from the first experimental, orbital-class flight of SpaceX's Crew Dragon space capsule.