Ax-4, with India’s Shubhanshu Shukla, to liftoff on June 8

Axiom Space's Ax-4 mission, piloted by India’s Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, is scheduled to launch to the ISS on June 8. The mission, carried by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, will include astronauts from India, Poland, and Hungary, marking a return to human spaceflight for each nation after over four decades.
Ax-4, with India’s Shubhanshu Shukla, to liftoff on June 8
Ax-4, piloted by Shubhanshu Shukla, has a research complement of around 60 scientific studies.
BENGALURU: Axiom Space late Wednesday said that the launch of its Axiom-4 mission (Ax-4) to the International Space Station (ISS), which will be piloted by India’s Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, will be scheduled for 9.11am (Eastern Time) — around 6.40pm IST, on June 8. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the Ax-4 crew aboard a Dragon spacecraft to the ISS from Launch Complex 39A at Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. TOI had reported last week that the mission, which was initially scheduled for May 29, was expected to be pushed to early June. Axiom, Nasa and SpaceX are now expected to provide a mission overview early next week. As part of Ax-4 mission, for the first time in history, astronauts from India, Poland, and Hungary will fly together to the ISS as part of a government-sponsored mission — with each nation returning to human spaceflight after more than four decades. India is spending around Rs 548 crore on the mission.Aside from Shukla, the Ax-4 crewmembers are Commander Peggy Whitson of the US, mission specialists Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of Poland and Tibor Kapu of Hungary.
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Chethan Kumar

As a young democracy grows out of adolescence, its rolling out reels and reels of tales. If the first post office or a telephone connection paints one colour, the Stamp of a stock market scam or the ‘Jewel Thieves’ scandal paint yet another colour. If failure of a sounding rocket was a stepping stone, sending 104 satellites in one go was a podium. If farmer suicides are a bad climax, growing number of Unicorns are a grand entry. Chethan Kumar, Senior Assistant Editor, The Times of India, who alternates between the mundane goings-on of the hoi polloi and the wonder-filled worlds of scientists and scamsters, politicians and Jawans, feels: There’s always a story, one just has to find it.

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