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Boeing Starliner will leave the International Space Station vacant, months later than originally planned | Real Time Headlines

On July 3, 2024, the Boeing spacecraft Starliner can be seen from the window of the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft “Endeavour”. The spacecraft docked with the International Space Station during a manned flight test.

NASA

boeing companyStarliner will depart the International Space Station on Friday, months after the spacecraft is scheduled to take off, and put two astronauts into orbit in early June.

Instead, NASA test pilots Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams He will remain on the International Space Station for the remainder of the year and will return to Earth aboard SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft in February.

The Starliner spacecraft’s hatches were closed Thursday in preparation for departure from the space station around 6 p.m. ET on Friday. After undocking, the capsule is expected to take about six hours to return to Earth at the landing area at White Sands Spaceport, New Mexico.

this Undocking process To protect the International Space Station and because astronauts won’t have manual controls on board if necessary, it will work slightly differently than crew members, NASA officials said Wednesday.

The return of Boeing’s Starliner capsule “Calypso” concludes a test flight that ended up taking much longer than NASA originally predicted and didn’t go as planned. The agency has repeatedly delayed the spacecraft’s return, citing a desire to collect more data about its spacecraft. Problematic propulsion system.

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Initially expected to remain in space for about nine days, Starliner later spent about three months at the International Space Station while Boeing investigated problems with the capsule’s thrusters. Boeing officials insisted at a press conference that Starliner can fly home safely in the event of an emergency, even if astronauts’ return is repeatedly delayed.

But NASA officials finally decided in late August that the agency would send Starliner back empty, saying it wanted to “further understand the root cause of the spacecraft problem.”

The Starliner crew flight test was supposed to be the final step for Boeing and a key addition for NASA. The agency wants two competing companies — Boeing and MuskSpaceX – Able to alternate missions to the International Space Station.

Instead, the test flight set back Boeing’s progress on NASA’s commercial crew program and surpassed $1.5 billion loss has been absorbed, potentially threatening the company’s future involvement.

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