Ax-2 will launch from NASAโ€™s Kennedy Space Center in Florida for a mission of no more than 14 days docked to the space station. NASA and Axiom will negotiate in-orbit activities for the private astronauts to conduct in coordination with space station crew members and flight controllers on the ground. The Ax-2 mission concept includes scientific research and outreach activities.

NASA and its international partners will review private astronauts selections proposed by Axiom for the Ax-2 mission, as is standard for any space station crew. The proposed crew members would undergo NASA medical qualification testing to be approved for flight.

NASA evaluated the mission proposal based on Axiomโ€™s ability to execute it successfully, NASAโ€™s ability to support it, and its contribution to the agencyโ€™s mission and goal of low-Earth orbit commercialization. This mission is subject to NASAโ€™s updatedย pricing policyย for private astronaut missions, which reflects the full value of costs to the agency that are above space station baseline capabilities.

Progress continues toward NASA and Axiomโ€™s first private astronaut mission to the space station,ย Axiom Mission 1ย (Ax-1), which is scheduled to launch no earlier than Feb. 21, 2022. Axiomโ€™s proposed crew members still are completing final evaluations by NASA and its international partners.

The agency did not make a selection for a third private astronaut mission from its June 2021ย research announcement. NASA will gather lessons learned from the first private astronaut flight as well as other applicable station activities and announce a new flight opportunity in the future.

Find more information about NASAโ€™s efforts to build a robust low-Earth orbit economy at:

 

https://www.nasa.gov/leo-economy

ย 

Josh Finch
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
[email protected]

 

Gary Jordan
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111
[email protected]

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