NASA astronaut Doug Hurley reflected about what it was like working with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk before he flew on a historic journey to space and returned in 2020.
In an interview with Fox News, Hurley spoke about his opinions of Musk, the billionaire space race, and a new \sNetflix
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Image connected to article documentary, “Return to Space” which chronicles Hurley’s adventure and that of colleague astronaut Bob Behnken as they embarked on the first human SpaceX trip to the International Space Station.
In May 2020, Musk and SpaceX made history as the business successfully sent two humans into space on a Crew Dragon spaceship. Shortly later, the astronauts’ spacecraft docked at the International Space Station.
The mission was the first time a commercial spaceship brought passengers into orbit and to the ISS.
According to Hurley, Musk exhibited a “great amount of worry” for his and Behnken’s safety when prepping for the launch.
“He wanted to assure that the operation would not only be successful but that we would come back to our families,” Hurley told Fox. “It prompted him to look at every single feasible problem with the spaceship to make sure that we arrive home safely,” he continued.
Hurley said one thing most people don’t get to observe about Musk is his “human side.” As the voyage came closer, Hurley recalls Musk speaking to every employee, “including the interns,” asking them about their fears regarding the trip.
“That, I believe, is a really human side of the character that many people do not get to witness. What I watched was a man who was really concerned about our well-being and our family. And I’ll be eternally grateful for it since it means I’m still alive “Hurley expressed himself.
Before the SpaceX launch, the US hadn’t taken anyone to space from American territory since 2011. Musk later revitalised American crewed spaceflight for NASA but also launched off a new age of commercial spaceflight with the 2020 mission.
One thing that “amazed” Hurley the most about Musk, though, is his “amazing knowledge of the technological problem.”
“You may talk to him about the ship itself or about a problem with the rocket – he is interested in learning about anything. He is a highly hands-on person “Hurley expressed himself. “You have engineers, really the specialists of the system, on site to solve those issues,” he continued.
Despite Hurley’s appreciation, Musk’s public reputation is rather divided.
His on-and-off romantic partner, the artist Grimes, recently described him in an interview with Vanity Fair as both “the joy of my life” and someone who says “dumb crap.” On the latter, Musk has regularly exhibited confusion of how key COVID-19 tests function and distrust of public health policies, Insider previously reported. He also tweeted “the coronavirus hysteria is stupid” in March 2020. Two years ago, the sickness had killed over 1 million of his fellow Americans.
Musk just joined the board of Twitter after progressively buying up the firm’s shares and becoming its biggest stakeholder. Some Twitter workers voiced irritation with the development, with one altering their name to “elon musk is a racist demagogue with a god complex.” Another claimed those demonstrating constituted “a vociferous minority” at Twitter, Insider said.