Nasa SpaceX launch - as it happened: Historic liftoff cancelled moments before takeoff over weather
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Your support makes all the difference.Nasa has postponed its first launch of astronauts from US soil in nine years due to bad weather, just minutes before lift-off.
Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley were due to travel to the International Space Station (ISS) on a rocket and capsule system built by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk's firm SpaceX.
But with rain and thunderstorms looming, the launch date has now been moved to Saturday at 20:22 pm UK time.
An estimated 1.7 million people from around the world tuned in to the launch from The Kennedy Space Centre in Florida.
However, as the weather conditions became worse, the US space agency "scrubbed" the mission for safety reasons less than 17 minutes before the Falcon 9 rocket was due to take off, along with the Crew Dragon spacecraft.
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Former astronaut Garrett Reisman notes that Nasa has had to be plenty patient already.
Donald Trump flew all the way to Florida for today's launch, arriving not long before scheduled liftoff. He's yet to tweet.
The propellant is out of the rocket now, meaning that the astronauts can disarm their escape system, and get ready to start getting out of the rocket.
The crew arm's swinging back again, when the hatch will be opened, the seats can be rotated and they'll be ready to get back out again.
Trump has left Kennedy Space Center and is on his way back to Washington DC on Air Force One.
People are coming into the crew access arm now, so they'll be able to open up the hatch and help the astronauts out.
The astronauts are still going to have to wait a while. The Pad Crew are in the arm sorting everything out for their egress, but that's going to take 10 minutes or so.
Mark Kelly, another former astronaut, has given his take on the scrubbed launch.
We're still waiting for the astronauts to get out. (They keep being checked on to ensure they're comfortable, and they say they are – really they should be, given they were scheduled to spend hours in those seats as they headed to space, and hours more as they headed back again.)
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