Space

Polaris Dawn crew flies higher than 1966 Gemini 11 orbital record

A commercial space crew has flown higher above Earth than anyone who has traveled since the last Apollo astronauts went to the moon.

The four members of the Polaris Dawn mission, riding aboard SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft “Resilience,” climbed into an elliptical orbit with a high point, or apogee, of 870 miles (1,400.7 kilometers) on Tuesday (Sep. 10). They reached the record distance about 15 hours after lifting off at 5:23 a.m. EDT (0923 GMT) from Florida earlier in the day and circling the planet about eight times in an initial orbit of 190 by 1,200 miles (306 by 1,930 km).

The crew’s top altitude more than doubled the maximum height that NASA’s space shuttle reached when it deployed the Hubble Space Telescope in 1990 and surpassed the previous record for a crewed spacecraft remaining in Earth orbit of 853 miles (1,373 km), achieved by NASA’s Gemini 11 mission in 1966.

The western half of Australia, looking west, as seen by the Gemini 11 crew as they were at a then-record-high apogee in 1966. (Image credit: NASA)

“This is the farthest humans have traveled since the last time humans walked on the moon more than 50 years ago,” said Jared Isaacman, the commander and billionaire sponsor of the Polaris Dawn mission, prior to his launch on Tuesday. “Two of my crewmembers, Sarah [Gillis] and Anna [Menon], will be the women who have traveled farthest from Earth ever, which I think is pretty cool.” (The fourth member of the crew is pilot Scott “Kidd” Poteet.) 




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