Tomorrow's test will demonstrate Crew Dragon's ability to separate from Falcon 9 and carry astronauts to safety in the unlikely event of an emergency on ascent pic.twitter.com/Cji4S5JDHl — SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 17, 2020

Last March, Crew Dragon successfully flew to the ISS and back, and if all goes well, a crewed flight could occur later this year. SpaceX is competing with Boeing's Starliner in the NASA Commercial Crew program, so every test flight counts.

Come back here just before 8 AM ET on January 18th, and if the weather holds then you should see the Crew Dragon separate from its Falcon 9, then eventually land in the Atlantic Ocean. Even if you wake up a little late, keep an eye out -- according to SpaceX, weather data suggests their best opportunity may be toward the end of the four-hour launch window.

Update (1/18 5AM ET): SpaceX announced that due to sustained winds and rough seas, it's now targeting Sunday for the in-flight abort test. A six-hour window will open at 8 AM ET on January 19th.

Update (1/19 9:30AM ET): The launch has been moved at the last minute to 10:30AM ET on the 19th to optimize for weather.