A tropical storm may scrub SpaceX's history-making rocket launch of 2 astronauts on Wednesday
- SpaceX, founded by Elon Musk more than 18 years ago, is about to rocket launch its first humans into orbit.
- If all goes according to plan, NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley will lift off at 4:33 p.m. ET on Wednesday as part of a test flight of the new Crew Dragon spaceship.
- However, weather forecasters said a tropical storm forming off the coast of South Carolina might delay the mission.
- The US Air Force's 45th Space Wing said on Monday there's a 50% chance of weather scrubbing the launch attempt.
- If it's not safe to launch SpaceX's new Crew Dragon spaceship on Wednesday, the company can try again at 3:22 p.m. ET on Saturday or 3 p.m. ET on Sunday.
SpaceX is on the cusp of making spaceflight history for both itself and NASA — that is, if the weather cooperates.
The private rocket company, founded by Elon Musk in 2002, is hoping to launch its first passengers into space from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
The test flight is called Demo-2, and it's the culmination of roughly $3.1 billion in funding from NASA through the agency's Commercial Crew Program, which is an effort to resurrect the human-spaceflight capability that NASA lost in July 2011 when it retired its fleet of space shuttles.
"We are going to launch American astronauts on American rockets from American soil," Jim Bridenstine, NASA's administrator, said during a televised briefing on May 1. "We're going to do it here in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, and I'm going to tell you that this is a high-priority mission to the United States of America."
Demo-2 requires the NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to climb aboard SpaceX's new Crew Dragon spaceship, launch into orbit atop a Falcon 9 rocket, and later dock with the International Space Station, where they could live for up to 110 days before returning to Earth.
Before the mission can lift off, though, SpaceX had to clear a handful of final hurdles.
On Friday, the company passed a critical safety review of the mission, test-fired its rocket, and, on Saturday, performed a launch dress rehearsal. On Monday, SpaceX passed an ultimate launch readiness review with NASA, which gave the Demo-2 mission a "go" for launch at 4:33 p.m. ET on Wednesday.
"Now the only thing we need to do is figure out how to do is control the weather," Kathy Lueders, who has managed NASA's Commercial Crew Program since 2013, said during a telephone press briefing on Monday.
And right now the weather is showing SpaceX and NASA who's boss.
Poor weather conditions in Florida and elsewhere might delay SpaceX's historic launch
During Monday's briefing, Mike McAleenan, the launch weather officer for the US Air Force's 45th Weather Squadron, jokingly assured Lueders that his division was "in the weather sales business, not production."
Storms have battered Cape Canaveral for days, dropping more than two inches of rain in the area on Monday.
Though the weather forecast on Monday evening was initially poor, with a 40% chance launching Demo-2 on Wednesday, the outlook had improved by Tuesday to a 60% chance of launch. But by launch day, the forecast had degraded due to the forming of a tropical storm off the coast of South Carolina — and the weather squadron is now giving the launch attempt a 50-50 chance.
Mission managers are monitoring dangers to the rocket, spaceship, and recovery crews, such high-altitude winds, lightning, and high seas in the Atlantic Ocean, where emergency rescue boats will be stationed in case Behnken and Hurley have to abort to safety after launch.
"Atlantic weather review tomorrow morning will determine if we can launch," Musk said late Tuesday night.
If SpaceX can't lift off the mission on Wednesday, its next chances to do so will be at 3:22 p.m. ET on Saturday or 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, Emre Kelly of Florida Today tweeted on Monday.
The launch is tricky not only because it's a test flight with people on board but also because it has to launch when the space station is more or less flying over the launch site (so the spaceship can use less fuel catching up to it). The window to launch lasts about one second, so if the moment is missed, the attempt will be scrubbed.
Weather is a concern elsewhere, too. The Crew Dragon will be rocketed eastward across the Atlantic Ocean, so clusters of planned emergency landing sites must be clear enough to recover the astronauts after they parachute back to Earth and splash into the water.
"In case something happens, you want to make sure that Dragon capsule can land," Hans Koenigsmann, SpaceX's vice president of mission assurance, said during Monday's briefing. "So the waves should be not too rough, the wind should not be too fast."
Demo-2 is also SpaceX's most important mission to date, since human lives are on the line.
SpaceX has cut down risk by flying its Falcon 9 rocket dozens of times beforehand. It also based the design of its new Crew Dragon vehicle — also called Dragon 2 — on its older Cargo Dragon ship called Dragon 1, which has successfully reached the ISS 20 times. Still, Crew Dragon has flown to orbit just once, on a mission called Demo-1 in March 2019, and performed a high-stress abort test in January 2020.
Musk told Irene Klotz of Aviation Week that while the threat was low, his "biggest concern" about the new spaceship was the capsule's asymmetric design, which is driven by its emergency escape system. While screaming back to Earth at 25 times the speed of sound, the capsule's heat shield will deflect and absorb the energy of superheated plasma — but the forces of atmospheric reentry have a slim chance of causing catastrophic issues, Musk said.
"If you rotate too much, then you could potentially catch the plasma in the super Draco escape thruster pods," Musk said, adding this could overheat parts of the ship or cause it to lose control (by wobbling). "We've looked at this six ways to Sunday, so it's not that I think this will fail. It's just that I worry a bit that it is asymmetric on the backshell."
When asked what kept him up at night, if anything, Koenigsmann named the Crew Dragon's parachutes as one concern, since their packing can't be tested until they're deployed, and the 200-or-so valves on the Falcon 9 rocket that have to work in concert.
But Koenigsmann ultimately indicated he's satisfied with the years of work toward making Crew Dragon safe to fly.
"I'm at the point right now where I'm actually worried about the weather, and that's a good sign," he told Business Insider.
Lueders said on Monday that she was moved by Saturday's dress rehearsal, during which the astronauts put on their spacesuits, drove a Tesla electric car to the launchpad, and climbed aboard the spaceship.
"I can't tell you how moving it was for me to see Bob and Doug get into vehicles, and ride out to the pad, and realize that the next time was going to be when we were getting ready to launch," Lueders said.
This story has been updated with new information. It was originally published at 12:31 a.m. ET on May 26, 2020.