Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Wednesday successfully docked space agency NASA’s Crew-4 mission astronauts with the International Space Station 16 hours after liftoff.
What Happened: SpaceX’s Dragon capsule named "Freedom" autonomously docked with the ISS at 7:37 pm ET, uniting the four Crew-4 astronauts with the Crew-3 members aboard the space station that orbits on, average, 248 miles above earth.
Watch Dragon and the Crew-4 astronauts dock with the @space_station → https://t.co/X7abHvGtMp https://t.co/d6l9cjPCgl
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 27, 2022
This was Dragon’s first flight for the mission and Falcon 9’s fourth flight after launching the CRS-22, Crew-3, and Turksat 5B missions previously.
The reusable Falcon 9 returned to land on the "A Shortfall of Gravitas" drone ship stationed in the Atlantic Ocean minutes after the launch.
The mission will ferry NASA astronauts Kjell Lindgren, Robert Hines, Jessica Watkins, and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti to the space station.
The space agency shared a short clip of the moment when the Crew-4 and the Crew-3 astronauts passed through the hatch to the orbiting laboratory and hugged each other.
Just this morning, the four #Crew4 astronauts were launching from @NASAKennedy. Now they're being greeted by the crew of the @Space_Station. Watch as they enter their new digs. pic.twitter.com/nifrIHBo5f
— NASA (@NASA) April 28, 2022
Crew-4 astronauts will depart the station and return to Earth no earlier than September 2022.
The Big Picture: SpaceX and NASA are working on multiple projects including a $2.9 billion lunar landing contract. Musk dreams of colonizing Mars and has in the past said he remains “highly confident” that SpaceX would land humans on Mars by 2026.
See Also: Elon Musk's SpaceX, NASA Gear Up To Send Crew-4 Astronauts To Space