NASA has announced the arrival of pilots in the first commercial space flight.
For the past seven years, NASA has been operating space rocket launchers only with Russian rocket launchers.
Nine chosen pilots will operate on systems developed by Boeing and Space-X and the terms of the contract that they have entered into.
Many of them have experience in how space works. The pilot and commanding officer of the Atlantis circuit completed in 2011 will also join the team.
The Atlantis shuttle reached its final destination in July 2011.
Jim Bridenstine, an American space agency manager at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, has introduced the team.
"For the first time since 2011, we are in America by rocket American rockets by the time we are nearing space on the US ground," he said.
Chris Ferguson, the commanding officer of the historic final shuttle operation, is now working in Boeing.
This first commercial vehicle will be connected to the International Space Station before it reaches Earth in a few days or weeks.
At the same time, the crew will go to the International Space Station with the capsule and stay longer.
The first long-aided event was unveiled by Josh Cassada, who had no previous space experiences, and the best-in-class experience in American history, Suni Williams. Suny Williams spent her 321 days in her career in space.
On behalf of Space-X, Mike Hopkins, Victor Glover, who has no space experience and 166 days of space-based experience, has been chosen for this tour.