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Meet the two Boeing mission astronauts stuck aboard the ISS

Messenger Desk

Published: 09:57, 10 August 2024

Meet the two Boeing mission astronauts stuck aboard the ISS

Photo: Collected 

Two astronauts stranded in space may sound like the start to a big-screen science thriller, but the Boeing Starliner mission is no work of Hollywood fiction.

Astronauts Barry "Butch" Wilmore and Sunita "Suni" Williams were originally scheduled to spend a little more than a week aboard the International Space Station as part of the debut crew flight test of the Starliner.

However, the spacecraft encountered several issues during the flight, and now the two astronauts will likely have to extend their stay aboard the ISS for several months.

NASA will issue a decision by mid-August as to whether Wilmore and Williams can return on board Starliner, or if they will have to wait for their retrieval by a SpaceX craft.

Regardless of the call made, the two professional astronauts are prepared to weather the storm.

"Butch and Suni are ready to do whatever we need them to do," said Steve Stich, a senior NASA official, earlier this week.

Both astronauts have worked as test pilots for the US Navy, and each has already flown to the ISS twice before.

Wilmore, the mission commander, had spent 178 days in space prior to the Boeing mission, while Williams, the pilot, had even more experience, with 322 days under her belt.

"We are having a great time here on ISS," Williams said during a press conference in July.
 
The pair had been actively involved in the Starliner's development for several years in preparation for its first manned test flight.

Dana Weigel, NASA's ISS program manager, said this week that Williams and Wilmore are "fully trained" for their extended stay in space.

"A couple years ago, we made the decision knowing that this was a test flight to make sure that we had the right resources, supplies and training for the crew, just in case they needed to be on ISS for whatever reason, for a longer period of time," she said.

While stuck aboard the ISS, the two astronauts are not sitting around twiddling their thumbs; rather, they play an active part in assisting the seven other astronauts on board with their daily work.

"It's been helpful to have the extra set of hands on board," Weigel said.

Messenger/Disha