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FAA gives spacecraft re-entry license to SpaceX
The SpaceX mission will be performed under a NASA program to develop commercial supply service to the international space station.
Tue, Nov 23 2010 at 6:52 PM
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RE-ENTERED: The SpaceX Corporation inaugural Falcon 9 rocket launching a Dragon test unit in June 2010. The company now has permission to allow orbiting spacecraft back to Earth. (Photo: ZUMA Press)
Technology entrepreneur Elon Musk's California-based space launch firm has become the first commercial company to receive a Federal Aviation Administration license to allow an orbiting spacecraft to return to Earth.
Hawthorne-based SpaceX says the FAA issued the license Monday.
SpaceX plans a December launch of one of its Falcon 9 rockets carrying a capsule dubbed Dragon. The mission calls for the capsule to go into low-Earth orbit then re-enter the atmosphere and land in the ocean.
So far, only six nations or governmental agencies have performed the feat.
The SpaceX mission will be performed under a NASA program to develop commercial supply service to the international space station.
SpaceX hopes to one day carry astronauts aboard its Dragon capsules.
Copyright 2010 AP News
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