The Polaris Dawn mission crew, from left: Medical officer Anna Menon, pilot Scott Poteet, commander Jared Isaacman, and mission specialist Sarah Gillis
(Polaris Program/John Kraus)
Source: CNBC
Isaacman also detailed the day-to-day schedule for Polaris Dawn, which will be in space for up to five days.
Day one is all about looking for a time when there’s minimal risk from micrometeorite orbital debris, which will determine exactly when Polaris Dawn will launch. After reaching an orbit of 190 kilometers by 1’200 kilometers, Isaacman said the crew will do extensive checks of SpaceX’s Dragon capsule Resilience.
It’s really important to know that the vehicle has no faults before going up to 1’400 kilometers altitude.
— Isaacman said
The spacecraft will also take early passes through the high radiation zone known as the South Atlantic Anomaly.
You ideally want to take that at the lowest altitude as you can because even down at 200 kilometers, the radiation level there is substantially higher … Our two or three passes at high altitude through the South Atlantic Anomaly will be almost the entirety of the radiation load on the mission and like an equivalency of three months on the International Space Station.
— Isaacman said
Day two will focus on some of the science and research that Polaris Dawn plans to accomplish — which will total about 40 experiments. The crew will also prep for the spacewalk, testing out the EVA suits.
So we can make sure that ... there’s nothing unexpected in microgravity versus what we were able to test on Earth.
— Isaacman said
Day three is the big one: The EVA.