Nasa's Wilmore, Williams homecoming faces another setback
Astronauts stuck at ISS won't return until late March or possibly April following launch delay of new capsule
Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams homecoming to Earth has faced another delay as Nasa says the pair stuck at the International Space Station (ISS) will have to wait "even longer" to return home.
The duo launched into space in June for an eight-day mission but have been floating in orbit ever since as their stay was extended to February next year after their spacecraft, Starliner built by Boeing, faced technical issues, according to BBC.
Wilmore and Williams won’t be back until late March or possibly April following a delay in launching a new capsule to the ISS.
According to Nasa, a new crew needs to launch before the pair's return and the next mission has faced a delay of more than a month.
The crew of four for the ISS was supposed to be launched by Nasa by February 2025 and the mission capsule was due to bring Wilmore and Williams home as well as astronauts Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov for the normal crew rotations.
The delay comes from SpaceX in preparing a brand-new Dragon capsule for the mission that is now scheduled to be deemed for flight readiness no earlier than late March.
The space agency said a different SpaceX capsule was considered for the mission to keep the flights on schedule but it has decided to wait for the new spacecraft to be made.
Nasa also assured that the delay posed no risk to the astronauts.
"The International Space Station recently received two resupply flights in November and is well-stocked with everything the crew needs, including food, water, clothing, and oxygen. The resupply spacecraft also carried special items for the crew to celebrate the holidays aboard the orbital platform,” Nasa said.
-
China-Europe partnership targets space weather in landmark joint mission
-
NASA Artemis II crew reaches moon’s sphere of influence ahead of historic flyby
-
Genes may matter more than thought in human lifespan, study finds
-
Astronomers discover myriad of stellar streams at the periphery of Milky Way
-
NASA Artemis II astronauts fix toilet glitch again midway to Moon
-
Scientists uncover 72 million years old dinosaur eggs and remnants of titanosaurs
-
Artemis II: Key milestones in NASA’s return to the Moon
-
NASA Artemis II crew to break Apollo 13 distance record
-
New study investigates phenomenon surpassing the speed of light
-
Polar Vortex enters final ‘seasonal’ phase: Rare shift signals winter weather risks into April
-
Why NASA Artemis II won’t take straight path to Moon: ‘Figure-8’ route explained
-
Even in space: NASA Artemis II astronauts hit Outlook glitch mid-mission