Skip to content
NASA

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-2 Mission

  • NASA Blogs Home

Separation Confirmed! Crew Dragon Leaves Behind Second Stage

Crew Dragon Endeavour has separated from the second stage and is flying on its own. The spacecraft is traveling at approximately 17,000 miles per hour. About one minute later the dragon nosecone open sequence will begin.

Author Linda HerridgePosted on April 23, 2021April 23, 2021Categories Commercial Crew, International Space Station, Kennedy Space Center, NASA, SpaceX Crew-2Tags Commercial Crew Program; SpaceX; Crew-2; Crew Dragon; Falcon 9 rocket; International Space Station; Launch Complex 39A; Kennedy Space Center; NASA

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Post navigation

Previous Previous post: Stage 1 Successfully Lands on Drone Ship
Next Next post: Crew Dragon Reaches Orbit, News Conference at 7:30 a.m. EDT

Archives

  • November 2021
  • April 2021

Categories

  • Commercial Crew
  • Commercial Spaceflight
  • Expedition 65
  • Expedition 66
  • International Space Station
  • Kennedy Space Center
  • NASA
  • NASA Astronauts
  • Sierra Nevada Corporation
  • SpaceX
  • SpaceX Crew-2
  • SpaceX Crew-3

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Recent Posts

  • Crew-2 Astronauts Safely Splash Down in Gulf of Mexico
  • Crew-2: Astronauts Safely Return to Earth at 10:33 p.m. EST
  • Crew-2: Crew Dragon Deorbit Burn Complete
  • Crew-2 Astronauts Conduct First “Fly Around” from Inside Crew Dragon
  • Crew-2: Crew Dragon Undocked at 2:05 p.m. EST from International Space Station

Recent Comments

    NASA logo
    NASA’s SpaceX Crew-2 Mission National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA Official: Brian Dunbar
    • No Fear Act
    • FOIA
    • Privacy
    • Office of Inspector General
    • Agency Financial Reports
    • Contact NASA