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NASA ASTRONAUTS ADDRESS PUBLIC AFTER UNEXPECTED NINE-MONTH SPACE MISSION

AppleMagazine

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April 04, 2025

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams spoke to reporters for the first time since returning from an unplanned nine-month mission aboard the International Space Station, shedding light on a test flight that ballooned from eight days due to mechanical issues with Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft.

NASA ASTRONAUTS ADDRESS PUBLIC AFTER UNEXPECTED NINE-MONTH SPACE MISSION

The duo faced the press at the Johnson Space Center, offering a detailed account of their extended stay and the technical challenges that kept them in orbit. Their comments provided a clear perspective on a journey that gripped public attention, revealing how they adapted to a prolonged mission with a mix of professionalism and calm resolve.

The astronauts launched aboard the Starliner from Cape Canaveral, intending to certify the vessel for NASA’s crew rotation program in a brief trip.

Problems with the spacecraft’s thrusters and helium system forced a drastic extension, leaving them aboard the station until a SpaceX vessel retrieved them after 286 days. Wilmore and Williams described their experience with straightforward candor, countering months of speculation and political noise with a focus on the facts of their mission.

imageTheir initial test turned into a full residency, contributing over 900 hours to scientific experiments and station maintenance. This press event, held in a packed Houston briefing room, delivered a firsthand look at a mission that tested NASA’s reliance on private industry partners.

STARLINER THRUSTER ISSUES DELAY RETURN

Wilmore and Williams took flight from Florida on the Boeing Starliner, a spacecraft designed to join NASA’s fleet for station crew missions. The plan called for an eight-day test to validate its docking, orbiting, and landing capabilities. Five of the vessel’s 28 thrusters malfunctioned during the approach to the station, a problem linked to helium leaks in its propulsion system. NASA chose to extend the mission, keeping the astronauts aloft as Boeing engineers analyzed the issues.

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