Update 10 a.m. March 9: This story has been updated to reflect the latest times from NASA.
NASA’s SpaceX’s Crew-5 astronaut mission is scheduled to depart from the International Space Station on Saturday (March 11), and you can watch the event live.
A SpaceX Dragon capsule carrying the Crew-5 quartet — NASA astronauts Josh Casada and Nicole Mann, Russian cosmonauts Anna Kikina, and Japanese cosmonaut Koichi Wakata — is scheduled to disengage from the International Space Station (ISS) at 2:05 a.m. EDT (0705). GMT) on Saturday, concluding its five months in orbit.
You can watch the Dragon’s departure live here on Space.com, courtesy of NASA, or directly through the agency (Opens in a new tab). Coverage begins at 12 a.m. EST (0500 GMT) on Saturday. NASA has twice postponed departures from the International Space Station due to weather concerns from the previously announced dates of Wednesday (March 7) and Thursday (March 8).
A deorbit burn that begins to drip will occur at 8:25 PM EST Saturday (0125 GMT Sunday March 12) with splashing expected around 9:19 PM EST Saturday (0219 GMT). GMT on Sunday 12 March).
Related: Northern Lights, Spacecraft Mods, and More: SpaceX Crew-5 astronauts reflect on their time in orbit
Crew-5 launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on October 5, 2022. It was a historic launch, making Mann the first Native American woman to reach space and Kekina the first Russian to fly into orbit on a private US spacecraft.
Crew-5 astronauts have spent five eventful months away from Earth. They’ve been treated to some pretty cool aurora displays, for example, and two Russian spacecraft docked on the International Space Station — a Soyuz crew-carrying vehicle and a robotic cargo ship — that leaked during the pilots’ stay on the station.
Dragon Crew-5, called Endurance, was briefly modified to accommodate an additional passenger—one of the three Soyuz astronauts, NASA’s Frank Rubio—in case an emergency evacuation to the International Space Station was required. But those modifications were removed last month, after Russia launched a replacement Soyuz aircraft that will take Rubio and his two crewmates back to Earth this fall.
There will still be a SpaceX mission on the International Space Station after Crew-5 departs: Crew-6 arrived at the orbiting laboratory early Friday morning (March 3) aboard Dragon Endeavor.
Crew-6 astronauts — NASA’s Woody Hoburg, Stephen Bowen, Sultan Al Neyadi of the Emirates, and Cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev — are scheduled to live aboard the International Space Station for the next six months.
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