Crew Dragon Endurance

Crew Dragon Endurance (Dragon C210) is a Crew Dragon spacecraft manufactured by SpaceX, built and operated under NASA's Commercial Crew Program. On 11 November 2021, it was launched to transport personnel to the International Space Station as part of the SpaceX Crew-3 mission, which became a part of ISS Expedition 66.

Endurance
TypeSpace capsule
ClassDragon 2
EponymEndurance (1912)
Serial no.C210
OwnerSpaceX
ManufacturerSpaceX
Specifications
Dimensions4.4 m × 3.7 m (14 ft × 12 ft)
PowerSolar panel
RocketFalcon 9 Block 5
History
LocationInternational Space Station
First flight
Last flight
Flights3
Flight timeCurrently in space
Dragon 2s

History

On 7 October 2021, it was announced that Dragon C210 will be called Endurance.[1] Astronaut Raja Chari said that the name honors the SpaceX and NASA teams that built the spacecraft and trained the astronauts who will fly it. Those workers endured through a pandemic. The name also honors Endurance, the ship used by Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. The three-masted vessel sank in 1915 after being bound in ice before reaching Antarctica[2] and was found during the Crew-3 mission.[3]

Endurance was first launched on 11 November 2021 (UTC) on a Falcon 9 Block 5 from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC), LC-39A, carrying NASA astronauts Raja Chari, Thomas Marshburn, and Kayla Barron, as well as ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer on a six-month mission to the International Space Station.

Flights

Mission Patch Launch date (UTC) Landing date (UTC) Crew Duration Remarks Outcome
Crew-3 11 November 2021, 02:03:31 UTC[4] 6 May 2022, 04:43 UTC 176 days, 2 hours and 39 minutes Long duration mission. Ferries four members of the Expedition 66/67 crew to the ISS. Success
Crew-5 5 October 2022, 16:00:57 UTC[5] 12 March 2023, 02:02 UTC [6] 157 days, 10 hours and 1 minute Long duration mission. Ferries four members of the Expedition 68 crew to the ISS. Success
Crew7 26 August 2023, 07:27 UTC[8] TBD Long duration mission. Ferries four members of the Expedition 69 crew to the ISS. Docked at ISS

References


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