The quarantine is part of the flight crew health stabilization protocol, a routine procedure implemented before all manned space missions to ensure astronauts' health and safety. This precaution helps to prevent potential illness from reaching the space station. During this period, the astronauts' interactions are heavily restricted, though they are still able to communicate remotely with their families and certain members of the launch team.
The astronauts will travel aboard the Starliner spacecraft, launched by a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, marking their mission as the first crewed flight for this spacecraft under NASA's Commercial Crew Program.
The quarantine will take place initially at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, and later at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida starting Thursday, April 25, continuing there until the launch.
In parallel, NASA and its partners, including Boeing and ULA, are conducting a Flight Test Readiness Review on April 24 and 25 to confirm all systems and teams are prepared for the mission.
Following the test flight, NASA plans to proceed with the certification of the Starliner spacecraft for regular missions to the space station, with the launch timed for no earlier than 10:34 p.m. EDT on May 6.
Related Links
NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com
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