Everett man launched into space for 3 days of orbiting Earth

By Marcia Dunn / Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida – SpaceX’s first private flight took off Wednesday night with two contest winners, a health worker and their wealthy sponsor, the most ambitious leap in space tourism to date.

It was the first time a rocket with an all-amateur crew – not professional astronauts – flew towards orbit.

The two men and two women of the Dragon capsule plan to spend three days orbiting the world from an unusually high orbit – 100 miles higher than the International Space Station – before splashing off the coast of Florida this weekend.

The flight is led by Jared Isaacman, 38, who made his fortune with a payment processing company he started as a teenager.

It is the first contribution by SpaceX founder Elon Musk in the competition for dollars for space tourism. Isaacman is the third billionaire to launch this summer, following the brief space flights of Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson and Blue Origin’s Jeff Bezos in July.

With Isaacman on the journey named Inspiration4, Hayley Arceneaux, 29, is a childhood cancer survivor who works as a medical assistant to where she was treated – St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Isaacman pledged $ 100 million out of pocket to the hospital and is asking for an additional $ 100 million in donations.

Contesting contest winners Chris Sembroski, 42, a data engineer in Everett, and Sian Proctor, 51, an educator at a community college in Tempe, Arizona.

Sembroski, a former Air Force rocket engineer who moved to Everett in 2007, is a home-based reliability engineer at Lockheed Martin. He entered an open lottery by donating to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. He didn’t win, but a college friend won and gave him the slot. He is married to Erin Duncan-Sembroski, an English teacher at Explorer Middle School south of Everett, and the couple have two girls.

Inspiration4 crew member Dr. Sian Proctor (right) waves to family members while Chris Sembroski speaks to a family member before heading to Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Pad 39-A and a scheduled launch with a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Wednesday in Cape Canaveral, Florida. (AP Photo / John Raoux)

Arceneaux becomes the youngest American woman in space and the first person in space with a prosthesis, a titanium rod in her left leg.

The recycled Falcon rocket rose from the same Kennedy Space Center pad used on the company’s three previous astronaut flights for NASA. But this time the Dragon capsule was aimed at an altitude of 575 kilometers, just behind the Hubble space telescope.

Your fully automatic capsule was already in orbit: it was used for SpaceX’s second astronaut flight for NASA to the space station. The only major change is the large arched window at the top instead of the space station’s usual docking mechanisms.

Isaacman, an accomplished pilot, persuaded SpaceX to bring the Dragon capsule higher than ever. Initially cautious due to the increased radiation exposure and other risks, SpaceX agreed after a security review.

“Now I just wish we’d get them to go higher,” Isaacman told reporters the night before the flight. “When we go back to the moon and Mars and beyond, we have to get a little out of our comfort zone and take the next step in that direction.”

Isaacman, whose Shift4 Payments company is based in Allentown, Pa., Pays the entire bill for the flight but does not say how many millions he paid. He and others deny those high price tags that will ultimately bring costs down.

“Yes, today you have to have a large amount of cash and be willing to part with it in order to afford a trip into space,” said Explorers Club president Richard Garriott, the son of a NASA astronaut who told the Russians paid more than one euro for a space station trip ten years ago. “But this is the only way we can lower the price and expand access, as was the case in other industries before.

Although the capsule is automated, the four Dragon drivers trained for the flight for six months to deal with any emergency. That training included centrifuge and fighter jet flights, take-off and re-entry drills in SpaceX’s capsule simulator, and a grueling hike up Washington’s Mount Rainier in the snow.

Four hours before take-off, the four four hours before take-off came out of SpaceX’s huge rocket hangar, waving and kissing their families and company employees before they were whisked into their sleek white flight suits. Once on the launch pad, they posed for photos and clenched their gloved fists before taking the elevator upstairs. Proctor was dancing as she walked to the hatch.

Unlike NASA missions, the public will not be able to listen, let alone watch events unfold in real time. Arceneaux hopes to get in touch with St. Jude patients, but the conversation will not be broadcast live.

On SpaceX’s next private trip early next year, a retired NASA astronaut will accompany three wealthy business people on a week-long visit to the space station. The Russians are bringing an actress, a film director and a Japanese tycoon to the space station in the next few months.

Once against space tourism, NASA is now a supporter. The move from government astronauts to laypersons “is just amazing,” said former NASA administrator Charles Bolden, a former space shuttle commander.

“Someday, NASA astronauts will be the exception, not the rule,” said Cornell University’s Mason Peck, an engineering professor who served as NASA’s chief technologist nearly a decade ago. “But they will likely continue to be the trailblazers that the rest of us will follow.”

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Inspiration4 crew member Dr. Sian Proctor (right) waves to family members while Chris Sembroski speaks to a family member before heading to Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Pad 39-A and a scheduled launch with a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Wednesday in Cape Canaveral, Florida. (AP Photo / John Raoux)

Sian Proctor (left) and Chris Sembroski (center) prepare to ride a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket to the launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida on Wednesday. (AP Photo / John Raoux)

A SpaceX Falcon 9 with four private individuals on board takes off from launch pad 39-A of the Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday in Cape Canaveral, Florida. (AP Photo / Chris O’Meara)