Skip to main content

NASA video relives this week’s spectacular SpaceX mission to the ISS

NASA has pulled together a great selection of video clips highlighting this week’s historic Crew-1 mission to the International Space Station (ISS).

The 180-second presentation (top) shows everything from the astronauts’ suiting-and-booting session to their arrival at the space station 27 hours after launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Sunday, November 15.

NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, and Shannon Walker, together with Japan’s Soichi Noguchi of Japan’s JAXA space agency, traveled aboard SpaceX’s Crew Dragon in the spacecraft’s first operational flight following a successful crewed test flight to the ISS over the summer.

On their journey to the ISS 250 miles above the surface of Earth, the astronauts took time out to give space fans a quick tour of the Crew Dragon capsule as it traveled through space.

The Crew Dragon docked with the space station on Monday, November 16. A short while later, the Crew-1 astronauts transferred from the capsule to the space station, greeting NASA astronaut Kate Rubins, and Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov, who have been on board the orbiting outpost since October.

Speaking last week about NASA’s renewed ability to launch and land space crews domestically for the first time since the space shuttle program ended in 2011, Crew Dragon commander Michael Hopkins said he and his fellow astronauts were “truly honored” to be “starting this new era where we’re going to rotate crews to the International Space Station from American soil with our commercial partners, like SpaceX.”

Elon Musk, the man who founded privately operated SpaceX 18 years ago with the bold aim of creating a reusable rocket system for more cost-effective space travel, said recently that SpaceX engineers had worked “incredibly hard” to develop the “first commercial human spaceflight system in history,” adding, “The breakthrough will inspire confidence in our endeavor to return to the moon, travel to Mars, and ultimately help humanity become multi-planetary.”

The current Expedition 64 crew will spend the next six months living and working aboard the space station. You can find out more about how astronauts work, rest, and play aboard the ISS by checking out these videos made by past visitors to the station. And yes, you’ll even get to see how astronauts use the bathroom in space.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch SpaceX’s Starship burn brightly as it hurtles toward Earth
SpaceX's Starship reentering Earth's atmosphere.

SpaceX surprised a lot of people on Thursday morning when its mighty Starship rocket managed not to blow up seconds after liftoff.

The Starship -- comprising the first-stage Super Heavy booster and upper-stage Starship spacecraft -- enjoyed its most successful test flight yet following two short-lived missions in April and November last year.

Read more
SpaceX’s Starship reaches orbit on third test flight
spacex starship third test flight screenshot 2024 03 14 143605

SpaceX's mighty Starship rocket has made it into space on its third test flight. The rocket, launched at 9:25 a.m. ET today, March 14, took to the skies over the Starbase launch facility in Boca Chica, Texas, and made it to orbit but was lost before the planned splashdown in the India Ocean.

The vehicle consists of the lower section, the Super Heavy booster, and the upper section, the Starship or ship. The two were stacked together ahead of today's flight and achieved separation a few minutes after launch. This tricky maneuver involves cutting off most of the booster's 33 Raptor engines and disengaging clamps connecting the booster to the ship. The ship then fires its own engines to head onward into orbit.

Read more
Watch SpaceX’s cinematic video previewing Starship megarocket test
spacex cinematic video previews starship test

After a long wait, SpaceX has finally received permission to launch the third test flight of the Starship, the most powerful rocket ever to have flown.

This means that SpaceX can proceed with its originally stated plan to launch the Starship -- comprising the first-stage Super Heavy booster and the upper-stage Starship spacecraft -- on Thursday, March 14. Digital Trends has all the information you need to watch a live stream of what promises to be a spectacular event.

Read more