Axiom Mission 2

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Axiom Mission 2
Axiom-2 Launch Show & Liftoff (KSC-20230521-PH-JBS01 0059) (cropped).jpg
A Falcon 9 launches Freedom and the Ax-2 crew to the International Space Station
NamesAx-2
Mission type Private spaceflight to ISS
Operator Axiom Space
COSPAR ID 2023-070A OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
SATCAT no. 56739 OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Website www.axiomspace.com
Mission duration9 days, 5 hours and 27 minutes
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type Crew Dragon Freedom
Manufacturer SpaceX
Crew
Crew size4
Members
Start of mission
Launch date21 May 2023, 21:37 UTC [1]
Rocket Falcon 9 Block 5 (B1080.1)
Launch site Kennedy Space Center, LC-39A
Contractor SpaceX
End of mission
Recovered by MV Megan
Landing date31 May 2023, 03:04 UTC
Landing site Gulf of Mexico
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric orbit
Regime Low Earth orbit
Inclination 51.66°
Docking with ISS
Docking port Harmony zenith
Docking date22 May 2023, 13:12 UTC
Undocking date30 May 2023, 15:05 UTC
Time docked8 days, 1 hour and 53 minutes [2]
Axiom Mission 2 Patch.png
Axiom Mission 2 patch
Ax-2 Crew Portrait.jpg
(L-R) Whitson, Shoffner, AlQarni and Barnawi 

Axiom Mission 2 (or Ax-2) was a private crewed spaceflight operated by Axiom Space. Ax-2 was launched on 21 May 2023 on a SpaceX Falcon 9, successfully docking with the International Space Station (ISS)on 22 May. [3] [2] After eight days docked to the ISS, the Dragon crew capsule Freedom undocked and returned to Earth twelve hours later. [4]

Contents

Ax-2 was the second Axiom mission after Axiom Mission 1 in April 2022 and the third private crewed SpaceX Dragon mission.

Crew

The crew included former NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson as mission commander and John Shoffner as pilot. [5] [6] The two Mission Specialists were Ali AlQarni and Rayyanah Barnawi of the Saudi Space Commission. [7]

Axiom had initially announced in April 2021 that one crew member for the second Axiom spaceflight to the ISS would be selected via Who Wants to Be an Astronaut?, a reality television series to be produced by Discovery Channel. [8] [9] On 11 January 2022, Axiom announced Italian Air Force (ItAF) Colonel Walter Villadei as the company’s first international professional astronaut. [10] Col. Villadei was subsequently announced by Axiom as a backup crew member for Ax-2. [11]

On 22 September 2022, Axiom Space announced it would partner with the Saudi Space Commission to send two Saudi astronauts on Ax-2 to research cancer, cloud seeding, and microgravity in space. [12] This mission included the first female Saudi astronaut to go to space. [13]

Prime crew

Position Astronaut
Spacecraft commander Flag of the United States.svg Peggy Whitson [7] , Axiom Space
Fourth spaceflight
Pilot Flag of the United States.svg John Shoffner [7] , Commercial astronaut
First spaceflight
Mission Specialist 1 Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Ali AlQarni [7] , SSC
First spaceflight
Mission Specialist 2 Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Rayyanah Barnawi [7] , SSC
First spaceflight

Backup crew

Position Astronaut
Spacecraft commander Flag of the United States.svg / Flag of Spain.svg Michael López-Alegría [14] , Axiom Space
Pilot Flag of Italy.svg Walter Villadei [14] , Italian Air Force
Mission Specialist 1 Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Ali AlGhamdi [14] SSC
Mission Specialist 2 Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Mariam Fardous [14] SSC

Mission

Axiom 2 lifted off on 21 May 2023 from Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center, onboard a Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket. For the first time on a crew mission, the first stage of Falcon 9 landed on land at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Landing Zone 1 instead of the more common at-sea recovery typical of crew flights. The mission, which was the second flight of Crew Dragon Freedom, docked with the International Space Station a day later.

During the mission, the crew performed public outreach activities along with scientific research, including studies into the effects of microgravity on stem cells and other biological experiments. [15]

After eight days docked to the ISS, Axiom 2 undocked and returned to Earth twelve hours later. Freedom splashed down successfully in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Panama City, Florida. It was recovered by SpaceX's recovery ship Megan. [4]

See also

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peggy Whitson</span> American astronaut and biochemistry researcher (born 1960)

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References

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