Spacex for launching special astronauts on the first polar orbit

This image is a courtesy of Fram2/Spacex offers from left to right, mission specialist and medical official Eric Philips, mission commander Chun Wang, pilot Rabia Rouge and Vehicle Commander Janekki Michaelsen.

Spacex is scheduled to launch the first human space straightener directly on the polar areas of the Earth on Monday-a tropical tropical task of days and funded by the private sector, which includes four astronauts.

“Fram2” was named after the famous Norwegian ship that was built in the nineteenth century of the Arctic and Southern Pole campaigns, and the task will be characterized by a set of experiments including taking the first X -rays in space and mushroom cultivation in minor gravity.

It is hoped that the research will support future travel to Mars in the future.

The crew will be launched on the Dragon Crew Crew Crew capsule at the Falcon 9 missile in a window that opens at 9:46 pm (0146 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Center in NASA in Florida.

“With the same leading spirit as the first polar explorers, we aim to restore new data and knowledge to enhance long -term goals to explore space,” said Chun Wang, the mission commander.

Wang, a Maltese adventurer and co -founder of the F2Pool and Skatefish, chose the rest of the crew: the driver of the vehicle, Jannicke Mikkelsen, a Norwegian film director; Mission Pilot Rabea Rogge, robotics researcher from Germany; Mission Equistric and Medical Eccy Eric Philps, an Australian polar explorer.

The team trained for eight months in preparation for the journey that lasted approximately four days, including a land trip in Alaska to simulate living in nearby places under harsh conditions.

When returning to Earth, the crew will try to get out of the spacecraft without additional medical support – part of a study to help researchers understand the quality of astronauts in performing basic tasks after space space.

With the exception of the APOLLO missions, the polar areas remained far from seeing astronauts, including those on board the International Space Station (ISS). Even in Apollo did not fly directly over the pillars of the earth.

Spacex has implemented five special spacecraft missions so far-three in cooperation with Axiom Space to ISS, and two free flights in the Earth orbit.

The first was an inspiration 4 in 2021, followed by Polaris Dawn, which included the first space managed by private astronauts.

Both tasks were rented by the billionaire billionaire Jarrid Isaac, a partner close to Elon Musk, CEO of Spacex, who was also nominated by President Donald Trump to work as an upcoming official at NASA.

© 2025 AFP

quote: Spacex for launching special astronauts on the first polar orbit (2025, 31 March).

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