MECO, stage sep, boostback
Great trunk view on separation
Nose cone deploy confirmed, no video
Dragon Separates from Falcon 9
Danielle Sempsrott Posted on June 3, 2021
The uncrewed Dragon spacecraft has separated from the second stage of the Falcon 9 rocket, continuing on its solo journey to the International Space Station to deliver crew supplies, vehicle hardware, and critical materials to support multiple science and research investigations that will take place aboard the orbiting laboratory.
Dragon is scheduled to arrive at the space station on Saturday, June 5. The spacecraft will autonomously dock to the station’s Harmony module, while Expedition 65 Flight Engineers Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur of NASA monitor its arrival. Dragon is expected to spend more than a month attached to the space station before autonomously undocking and returning to Earth, splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean with research and return cargo.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacexcrs22/2021/06/03/dragon-separates-from-falcon-9/
That Dragon trunk is full of power! Once those iROSA solar panels are installed on the @Space_Station, they will roll out like a giant yoga mat. A supercharged yoga mat that provides an increase in energy available for research and station activities.
https://twitter.com/ISS_Research/status/1400508986718294020
NASA just removed 9 of 10 Elana 36 payloads from the Elana webpage. Only RamSat is left:
ELaNa 36
Mission: SpaceX 22 – Falcon 9, Kennedy Space Center, FL
1 CubeSat Mission scheduled to be deployed
* RamSat - Oak Ridge Public Schools (Robertsville Middle School), Oak Ridge, Tennessee
This was the first update of that webpage since months. A mistake or intentional?
Better view of the landing