7.10.2021
Chris Cassidy on a spacewalk in 2009. The astronaut's final mission is documented in a new Disney + series. NASA
In October 2020, Captain Chris Cassidy completed an extraordinary career as an astronaut when he returned to Earth from the International Space Station (ISS). A year on, Cassidy's final space mission is documented in a new Disney + series.
The six-part series called Among the Stars follows Cassidy—who was the 500th person to venture into space—and a team of engineers, flight controllers, and specialists as they prepare for the astronaut's third and final trip into space.
Cassidy, who was born in Massachusetts in 1970, joined NASA in 2004 after a career in the Navy that saw him awarded the Bronze Star Medal with combat 'V' and Presidential Unit Citation for leading a nine‐day operation at the Zharwar Kili cave complex on the Afghanistan/Pakistan border.
"I've been an astronaut for about 18 years. In fact, I just retired from NASA this month," Cassidy told Newsweek. "The first mission was a space shuttle mission STS 127 [the aim of which was to deliver a module that allowed experiments to be conducted outside the station in the near-vacuum of space] in 2009, which was aboard the space shuttle Endeavour."
The retired astronaut explains that on this first mission he and his teammates visited the ISS but stayed there for only two weeks while they delivered cargo and components to build the space station. The average stay aboard the ISS for astronauts today is around six months.
"The highlight of my first mission was experiencing the thrill of launch for the first time and my very first spacewalk. Those are things that I will never forget," he said.
His next two missions would involve longer stays aboard the ISS, with Cassidy staying on the station— which orbits at around 230 to 270 miles above Earth's surface—for six months at a time. It was during these stays that Cassidy embarked on the numerous spacewalks that took him outside the relative safety of the ISS and into the vast emptiness of space.
"There's a lot of emotions that go along with that. They're most heightened on your first spacewalk. It's just magnified, and multiplied many times over," Cassidy said. "When you're orbiting the world at three or 450 kilometers [217 or 279 miles] above the surface of the Earth traveling at five miles a second, can you open that hatch and you look down to the clouds moving at a rapid rate through between your toes?
"We tell first-time spacewalkers, 'just hold on to the handrail for about a few minutes, and just calm down let yourself breathe, and realize it's going to be okay. And then get on get on with your work'."
Cassidy added that the trepidation around spacewalks soon vanishes when astronauts realize they have a job to do and they could be installing a piece of equipment that costs thousands of dollars and took years to develop.
"You don't want to screw that up," he said.
For example, during the 2020 mission European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano performed repairs on the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a particle detector that cost $2 billion to build.
Yet even as a seasoned hand with numerous spacewalks under his belt, this latest mission still threw up some heart-stopping moments. "My friend Luca Parmitano had a spacewalk, where water was leaking into his helmet and that was very, very scary.
"That was something that I'll never forget."