Billionaire and engineer conduct first private spacewalk in SpaceX mission

Jared Isaacman, 41, exits the SpaceX capsule on a tether into the vacuum of space, hundreds of miles from Earth during the world's first private spacewalk on Sept. 12, 2024, in a still image from video. SpaceX/Handout via REUTERS
Two astronauts - a billionaire and an engineer - completed
the world's first private spacewalk in orbit on Thursday outside a SpaceX
capsule, wearing a new line of spacesuits in a risky feat previously exclusive
to astronauts from national space programs.
The astronauts on the Polaris
Dawn mission went one at a time, each spending about 10 minutes
outside the gumdrop-shaped Crew Dragon capsule on a tether, as Elon Musk's
company again succeeded in pushing the boundaries of commercial spaceflight.
Jared Isaacman, a pilot and the founder of electronic
payments company Shift4 exited first, followed by SpaceX engineer Sarah Gillis,
while crewmates Scott Poteet and Anna Menon watched from inside. The whole
process, unfolding about 450 miles (730 km) above Earth, lasted an hour and 46
minutes. The four astronauts have been orbiting Earth since Tuesday's launch
from Florida.
Isaacman is bankrolling the Polaris mission, as he did his
Inspiration4 flight with SpaceX in 2021.
Streamed live on SpaceX's website, the mission tested
trailblazing equipment including slim spacesuits and a process to fully
depressurize the Crew Dragon cabin - technology that Musk hopes to advance for
ambitious future private missions to Mars.
"Back at home, we all have a lot of work to do. But from
here, Earth sure looks like a perfect world," Isaacman said after emerging
from the spacecraft, silhouetted with the half-lit planet glittering below.
It was one of the riskiest
missions yet for SpaceX, the only private company that has proven to
be capable of routinely sending people to and from Earth's orbit.
Before the spacewalk began at about 6:52 a.m. ET (1052 GMT),
the capsule was completely depressurized, with the astronauts relying on their
SpaceX-developed spacesuits for oxygen, provided through an umbilical
connection to Crew Dragon.
Isaacman, 41, and Gillis, 30, rose from Crew Dragon's hatch door
into space to test various body movements in the suit, voicing feedback to
ground control to inform future design iterations. Their posture appeared stiff
as they were able to move their arms at the elbow and shoulder but less so at
the waist, back and neck.
The mission tested the spacesuit design and procedures for
the capsule, among other things, in a mission meant to test the limits of what
private companies can do in orbit.
Ground teams at SpaceX's Hawthorne, California, headquarters
watched as the capsule's hatch door sealed shut and carried out leak checks as
the astronauts returned to their cabin seats.
The first U.S. spacewalk in 1965, aboard a Gemini capsule,
used a similar procedure to the one used on Thursday: the capsule was
depressurized, the hatch opened, and a spacesuited astronaut ventured outside
on a tether.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, whose agency helped fund
Crew Dragon development beginning roughly a decade ago, lauded Thursday's
accomplishment.
"Today's success represents a giant leap forward for
the commercial space industry and @NASA's long-term goal to build a vibrant
U.S. space economy," Nelson wrote on social media.
Isaacman has declined to say how much he is paying, but his
missions are likely to cost hundreds of millions of dollars, based on Crew
Dragon's price of roughly $55 million a seat for other flights.
Gillis started at SpaceX as an intern in 2015. Poteet, 50,
is a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel. Menon, 38, is a SpaceX
engineer.
Throughout Wednesday, the craft circled Earth at least six
times in an oval-shaped orbit as shallow as 118 miles (190 km) and stretching
out as far as 870 miles (1,400 km), the farthest in space that humans have
travelled since the last U.S. Apollo mission to the moon in 1972.
Only government astronauts with several years of training
have conducted spacewalks in the past. There have been roughly 270 on the
International Space Station (ISS) since it was set up in 2000, and 16 by
Chinese astronauts on China's Tiangong space station.
The Polaris crew has spent 2-1/2 years training with SpaceX
mission simulations and "experiential learning" in challenging,
uncomfortable environments, according to Poteet.
A record 19 astronauts are currently in orbit, after
Russia's Soyuz MS-26 mission ferried two cosmonauts and an American astronaut
to the International Space Station on Wednesday, taking its headcount to 12.
Three Chinese astronauts are aboard the Tiangong space station.
Since 2001, Crew Dragon, the only U.S. vehicle capable of
reliably putting people in orbit and returning them to Earth, has flown more
than a dozen astronaut missions, mainly for NASA.
The agency seeded the development of the capsule under a program
meant to establish commercial and privately built U.S. vehicles capable of
ferrying astronauts to and from the ISS.
Also developed under that program was Boeing's Starliner
capsule. Starliner launched its first astronauts to the ISS in June in a
troubled test mission that ended this month with the capsule returning empty,
leaving its crew on the space station for a Crew Dragon capsule to fetch next
year.
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