First private spacewalk | SpaceX rocket launches Friday

(Washington) The launch of SpaceX’s rocket for a groundbreaking space mission including the first private spacewalk in history, Polaris Dawn, is scheduled to take place Friday after being postponed last week, US authorities announced Tuesday.


A four-hour launch window is scheduled to open at 3:33 a.m. ET Friday from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, with additional options Saturday and Sunday, according to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

Elon Musk’s SpaceX has yet to comment on the new launch window.

Comprising a billionaire, a pilot and two employees, the Polaris Dawn mission had already been postponed for 24 hours after the detection on August 26 of a “helium leak” on a link powering the rocket.

It was then postponed again on Friday “due to adverse weather forecasts,” according to SpaceX.

The commander of this five-day mission is American billionaire Jared Isaacman, who has been working with Elon Musk’s company for several years.

The trip is intended to test SpaceX’s first ever spacesuits, which are white and have a futuristic look.

The spacewalk, which promises to be spectacular, was to be broadcast live on the third day of the mission.

In another piece of good news for SpaceX after a complicated week, its Falcon 9 rockets, the company’s most widely used, were cleared for takeoff by the FAA on Friday after a rare incident that led to them being grounded.


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