Boeing's Starliner joins select club of crewed US spaceships Washington, May 6 (AFP) May 06, 2024 Throughout the annals of American space exploration, a select few spacecraft have had the distinction of carrying human beings beyond Earth. Boeing is poised to join this elite group with the long-awaited launch of its Starliner capsule, just the sixth class of vessel built in the United States for NASA astronauts. Here's a recap of their storied past, marked by groundbreaking triumphs and some devastating setbacks.
On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American to fly in space during a 15-minute suborbital flight in the one-man, cone-shaped capsule -- about a month after the Soviet Union's Yuri Gagarin became the first human to achieve the feat. Another milestone came in February 1962 when Mercury astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth. Black mathematician Katherine Johnson, whose story was immortalized in the book and film "Hidden Figures," was among those working tirelessly from the ground to ensure the program's success.
The Gemini spaceship resembled an enlarged Mercury capsule, designed for a two-person crew. A significant innovation was the introduction of onboard computers, primitive by today's standards but capable of assisting with the complexities of a space rendezvous. During the final Gemini mission, Buzz Aldrin -- nicknamed "Dr Rendezvous" -- was forced to pull out a sextant and make critical calculations on paper using a slide rule, in order to accomplish docking with an uncrewed practice spacecraft after the computerized tracking system went down.
Achieving the goal required three key pieces of technology. The first was the giant Saturn V rocket. Designed under ex-Nazi Wernher von Braun, it remained the most powerful rocket for five decades. The second piece was the command module -- whose interior was as roomy as a big car -- and the third was the lunar descent vehicle. While Apollo 11 achieved humanity's first crewed touchdown on July 20, 1969, the program was also marked by tragedy. A fire during a preflight test for Apollo 1 killed all three crew members, highlighting the risks and sacrifices made in pursuit of space exploration.
The era marked significant milestones, including the first space flights by American women and minorities, the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope on the shuttle Discovery, and the construction of the International Space Station in the late 1990s. However, it was also marred by two devastating tragedies: the 1986 Challenger disaster, which occurred just after launch, and the 2003 Columbia disaster, which happened during re-entry. Both incidents resulted in the loss of all crew members, totaling 14 lives. Despite these setbacks, former astronaut Tom Jones, author of "Space Shuttle Stories," argued the shuttle was far ahead of its time and was "an iconic symbol of America's presence in space."
NASA decided to shift from a model where it owned the hardware, to instead hiring services from the commercial industry in multibillion dollar contracts. Newcomer SpaceX beat heavily-favored aerospace titan Boeing in flying its first crew to the ISS in 2020, an underdog triumph that catapulted Elon Musk's company to powerhouse status. Meanwhile, Boeing has struggled with technical issues, echoing wider organizational problems that have plagued its aviation division. Both companies have adopted the classic gumdrop-shaped capsule design, but with modern twists: sleek displays, autonomous flight, and full reusability. |
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