Initially heading into space for an eight-day mission, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, two space veterans, have been stuck on the ISS for six months due to malfunctions on the Boeing Starliner spacecraft that had transported them to space. June.
After long weeks of tests on Starliner, the American space agency decided in the summer to bring it back empty and bring back the two castaways with the SpaceX Crew-9 mission.
The latter took off at the end of September with two passengers on board – instead of the four initially planned – to leave two seats free and joined the ISS where it is now waiting to be relayed by the Crew-10 mission.
However, NASA announced on Tuesday the postponement from February to “the end of March at the earliest” of the launch of Crew-10 in order to give “to NASA and SpaceX teams to complete the development of a new Dragon spacecraft”.
This announcement therefore further delays the return to Earth of the two shipwrecked astronauts and the crew of Crew-9.
The castaways of the ISS
If they return in March, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will have spent more than nine months in space instead of the eight days initially planned.
They were conducting the first crewed test flight of Boeing’s Starliner when problems were detected with the propulsion system.
These failures led NASA to question the reliability of the vessel, a snub for the American manufacturer already mired in repeated setbacks with its airliners.
During a press conference at the beginning of September, the two astronauts nevertheless assured that they were adapting well to their extended stay.
"The transition wasn’t that difficult," Suni Williams said. “We’re both from the Navy, we’ve both been deployed before. We’re not surprised when missions are changed.”
“All rights of reproduction and representation reserved. ©2024 Agence France-Presse. All information (text, photo, video, fixed or animated infographics, sound or multimedia content) reproduced on this page is protected by current legislation on intellectual property rights. Consequently, any reproduction, representation, modification, translation, commercial exploitation or reuse in any manner whatsoever is prohibited without the prior written consent of AFP, with the exception of personal non-commercial use. The AFP cannot be held responsible for delays, errors, omissions which cannot be excluded in the field of press information, nor for the consequences of actions or transactions carried out on the basis of this information. AFP and its logo are registered trademarks »