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Nicole Mann, second right, with Josh Cassada, Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina, and Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata.
Nicole Mann, second right, with Josh Cassada, Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina, and Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Nicole Mann, second right, with Josh Cassada, Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina, and Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Nicole Mann becomes first Native American woman in space on Crew-5 mission

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SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with quartet including first Russian to join US space flight since Ukraine invasion to blast off on Wednesday

Nicole Mann has become the first Native American woman in space as she lifted off in command of a flight to the International Space Station on Wednesday that also included the first Russian to join a US space flight since the invasion of Ukraine.

Mann’s journey on the launch vehicle, which consists of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket topped with a Crew Dragon capsule named Endurance, took off on schedule at noon from Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

The four-member crew is scheduled to arrive at the ISS after about 29 hours, on Thursday evening, to begin a 150-day science mission aboard the orbital laboratory 250 miles (420km) above Earth.

The mission, designated Crew-5, marks the fifth full-fledged ISS crew Nasa has flown aboard a SpaceX vehicle since the private rocket venture, founded by the Tesla owner, Elon Musk, began sending US astronauts aloft in May 2020.

Mann, 45, is a veteran combat pilot who has made spaceflight history not just as the first indigenous woman in orbit but as the first woman to command a Crew Dragon capsule.

Her team includes the Russian cosmonaut Anna Kikina, who is hitching a ride alongside the American astronaut Josh Cassada and Japan’s Koichi Wakata.

The rocket blasts off from Cape Canaveral. Photograph: Steve Nesius/Reuters

Mann is a US Marine Corps colonel who flew combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan and holds a master’s degree in engineering, specializing in fluid mechanics.

She is a registered member of the Wailacki of the Round Valley Indian Tribes. The only other Indigenous American to have entered orbit is John Herrington, who flew on a 2002 shuttle mission.

“I feel very proud,” Mann said of her historic trip before lift-off. “It’s important that we celebrate our diversity and really communicate that specifically to the younger generation.”

Referring to the excitement that her trip has generated among some Native American communities, she said: “That’s really, I think, an audience that we don’t get an opportunity to reach out to very often.”

The Crew-5 mission is also notable for the inclusion of Kikina, 38, the lone female cosmonaut on active duty for the Russian space agency Roscosmos, and the first Russian to fly onboard an American spacecraft since Russia invaded Ukraine in February. The last Russian cosmonaut to ride a US rocket into orbit was in 2002, on a Nasa space shuttle.

Kikina is swapping places with a Nasa astronaut who took her seat onboard a Russian Soyuz flight to the ISS last month, under a new ride-sharing deal signed by Nasa and Roscosmos in July.

She would be only the fifth Russian woman in space. “In general, for me, it doesn’t matter,” she explained in a recent interview. “But I realize the responsibility for it because I represent the people of my country.“

The Crew-5 team will be welcomed by seven existing ISS occupants – the Crew-4 team consisting of three Americans and an Italian astronaut, as well as two Russians and a Nasa astronaut who flew with them to orbit on a Soyuz flight.

The new arrivals are tasked with conducting more than 200 experiments, many of them focused on medical research ranging from 3-D bio-printing of human tissue to the study of bacteria cultured in microgravity.

US-Russian space cooperation has been tested as never before since Russia invaded Ukraine in February, leading the Biden administration to impose sweeping sanctions against Moscow.

During a news briefing with Nasa and SpaceX on Monday, a high-ranking Roscosmos official, Sergei Krikalev, said his agency has approval to continue with the ISS until 2024 and hopes to secure Kremlin “permission” to extend the partnership further, until Russia builds a new space station.

Nasa hopes to keep the ISS running with its existing partners until roughly 2030.

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