Delta-V

SpaceX Successfully Tests a New Space Capsule

The private company has taken another step toward carrying astronauts to the International Space Station.

Brittany Sauser 08/25/2010

  • 2 Comments
The three main parachutes on SpaceX's Dragon
spacecraft carry to a landing in the Pacific Ocean during a
drop test. Credit: Chris Thompson/SpaceX

Space Exploration Technologies (or SpaceX) has successfully drop-tested a capsule designed to take cargo and crew to the International Space Station.

The capsule, called Dragon, was dropped from 4,240 meters to validate its parachutes and splashdown systems. It has three main parachutes, each 35 meters wide, which are used to slow the spacecraft's descent, and thrusters that fire to help it navigate to it's landing location. Eventually, SpaceX wants to bring the capsule down on land. The drop test was the final in a series of tests designed to ensure that the spacecraft is ready for its maiden test flight on the Falcon 9 rocket, scheduled for later this year.

"Data gathered during the drop test will be invaluable as we prepare for the upcoming demonstration flight of the first operational Dragon spacecraft," said Chris Thompson, SpaceX vice president of structures in this Space.com article.

SpaceX received a $1.6 billion contract from NASA to provide the agency with a launch vehicle and spacecraft to carry cargo to the space station, with the option of manned missions, once the space shuttles retire next year. Cargo-carrying flights are scheduled to begin in 2011, and SpaceX says crew capabilities can be ready within three years of NASA's orders.

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gabrielg01

450 Comments

  • 527 Days Ago
  • 08/29/2010

Back to the future

Capsules descending on parachutes...Haven't we already done this half a century ago? wtf people, is this what we call progress? :(

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djweber

10 Comments

  • 526 Days Ago
  • 08/30/2010

Re: Back to the future

Landing by capsule can make a lot more sense than landing by shuttle.  Wings on a spacecraft are dead mass and/or a big problem for 99% of its mission life.

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Bio

This blog focuses on the nuts-and-bolts of space technology. We're interested in the hardware that's actually going into orbit and beyond. We write about what's involved in building, launching, and operating spacecraft, exploration vehicles, and habitats (and what it takes on the ground to support them) today.

Delta-V is written by Stephen Cass, a senior editor at TR who has covered space technology and exploration for nine years, and Brittany Sauser, a space technology reporter at TR.

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