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SpaceX CRS-8
2016 American spaceflight to the ISS
2016 American spaceflight to the ISS
Field
Value
name
SpaceX CRS-8
image
CRS-8 Dragon from ISS (ISS047E050978).jpg
image_caption
The CRS-8 SpaceX Dragon captured by Canadarm on April 10, 2016
insignia
SpaceX CRS-8 Patch.png
insignia_caption
NASA SpX-8 mission patch
names_list
SpX-8
mission_type
ISS resupply
operator
SpaceX
mission_duration
spacecraft
spacecraft_type
Dragon 1
manufacturer
SpaceX
launch_date
UTC
launch_rocket
Falcon 9 Full Thrust (B1021)
launch_site
Cape Canaveral, SLC-40
launch_contractor
SpaceX
disposal_type
Recovered
landing_date
UTC
landing_site
Pacific Ocean
orbit_epoch
May 10, 2016, 13:19:38 UTC
orbit_reference
Geocentric
orbit_regime
Low Earth
orbit_periapsis
402 km
orbit_apoapsis
405 km
orbit_inclination
51.64 degrees
orbit_period
92.63 minutes
docking
{{Infobox spaceflight/Dock
docking_target
ISS
docking_type
berth
docking_port
*Harmony* nadir
capture_date
April 10, 2016, 11:23 UTC
docking_date
April 10, 2016, 13:57 UTC
undocking_date
May 11, 2016, 11:00 UTC
release_date
May 11, 2016, 13:19 UTC
time_docked
30 days, 21 hours, 3 minutes
cargo_mass
3136 kg
cargo_mass_press
1723 kg
cargo_mass_unpress
1413 kg
programme
Commercial Resupply Services
previous_mission
OA-6
next_mission
SpaceX CRS-9
programme2
Cargo Dragon
previous_mission2
SpaceX CRS-7
next_mission2
SpaceX CRS-9
SpaceX CRS-8, also known as SpX-8, was a Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station (ISS) which was launched on April 8, 2016, at 20:43 UTC. It was the 23rd flight of a Falcon 9 rocket, the tenth flight of a Dragon cargo spacecraft and the eighth operational mission contracted to SpaceX by NASA under the Commercial Resupply Services program. The capsule carried over 3100 kg of cargo to the ISS including the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM), a prototype inflatable space habitat delivered in the vehicle's trunk, which was attached to the station and, as of May 2022, is expected to remain so for five more full years of in-orbit viability tests.
After boosting the payload on its orbital trajectory, the rocket's first stage re-entered the denser layers of the atmosphere and landed vertically on the ocean landing platform Of Course I Still Love You nine minutes after liftoff, achieving a long-sought-after milestone in SpaceX reusable launch system development program.
The recovered Falcon 9 first stage (B1021) from this mission became the first one to be flown again, launching the SES-10 satellite on March 30, 2017.
Launch schedule history
Falcon 9 lifting off from SLC-40 on April 8, 2016.
The launch was initially scheduled by NASA to occur no earlier than September 2, 2015. The launch date went under review pending the outcome of the analysis of the failure of the Falcon 9 launch vehicle in SpaceX CRS-7, a June 2015 flight. The return-to-flight (RTF) project included additional improvements.
With additional manifest changes announced by SpaceX in mid-October, CRS-8 was scheduled to be the third launch of the upgraded Falcon 9 Full Thrust rocket. By March 2016, the launch date was set to April 8, 2016, with a backup launch window the next day.
The spacecraft was finally launched on schedule, at 20:43 UTC on April 8, 2016. The rocket first stage separated around 2 minutes 40 seconds after liftoff, and the second stage separated around ten minutes 30 seconds after liftoff.
Primary payload
NASA has contracted for the CRS-8 mission from SpaceX and therefore determines the orbital parameters for the primary payload – the Dragon space capsule.
The mission delivered 3136 kg of supplies, experiments, and hardware to the ISS. These include the station's first expandable module, called the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM), which is expected to remain on the station for at least five more full years of observation and testing. Also delivered in the Dragon were sixteen Flock 2d 3U CubeSats for the Earth-observing Flock constellation, built and operated by Planet Labs, which will be deployed by the NanoRacks CubeSat Deployer.
After splashdown, the mission returned more than 3700 lb of cargo from the station back to Earth.
First stage landing
Main article: Falcon 9 first-stage landing tests
First stage of Falcon 9 Flight 23 landed on autonomous spaceport drone ship
After placing the CRS-8 cargo on its way to the International Space Station, the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket conducted an experimental boostback and re-entry maneuver over the Atlantic Ocean. Nine minutes after liftoff, at 20:52:10 UTC, the booster landed vertically on the autonomous spaceport drone ship Of Course I Still Love You, 300 km from the Florida coastline, achieving a long-sought-after milestone for the SpaceX reusable launch system development program.
This was the second successful landing achieved by a SpaceX orbital launch vehicle and the first vertical landing by any organization on a floating platform. SpaceX first landed a Falcon 9 on solid ground at Cape Canaveral with flight 20 on December 22, 2015.
Port arrival
The drone ship carried the stage to Port Canaveral, Florida, arriving on April 12, 2016 (UTC), where it was offloaded. SpaceX plans to keep this first stage in Cape Canaveral and conduct a series of test fires to ensure that the vehicle is ready for a future operational mission. According to SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, the rocket will likely be test-fired at Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39. Musk noted that assuming the test fires went well, the stage would likely be reflown for a mission in June 2016.
First stage reflight
The first stage of the CRS-8 launch was selected to be reflown first, in early 2017. Additional tests were conducted prior to SpaceX certifying the stage's suitability for reuse on subsequent launch. On January 31, 2017, SpaceX posted a photo of a static fire test of this stage in Texas. It was launched again on March 30, 2017, as part of Falcon 9 Flight 32 carrying the SES-10 communications satellite. The stage was also recovered a second time after landing on the drone ship Of Course I Still Love You.
As part of a multi-month multi-vehicle test process to reuse Falcon 9 boosters, another first stage — from flight 24 which carried JCSAT-14 — was designated a "reference vehicle" for further testing, because it encountered "extreme temperatures during its reentry into Earth atmosphere" in May 2016 from a more energetic GTO trajectory. This booster underwent a series of tests, including a 150-second full-duration engine firing which was completed on July 28, 2016.
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