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Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft was set to achieve its crowning achievement this month by ferrying two NASA astronauts to the International Space Station and back, proving the long-delayed and overbudget capsule is up to the task.
Starliner is halfway to that goal.
But the two veteran astronauts in charge of this test flight are now in an interim position, having extended their stay at the space station for a second time while engineers on the ground struggle to learn more about problems that plagued the first leg of the flight.
Spaceflight veterans Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore arrived at the space station aboard Starliner on June 6. NASA initially expected their stay to be about a week.
But problems the spacecraft experienced along the way, including a helium leak and a sudden thruster failure, have raised questions about how the second half of the mission will unfold.
NASA announced Tuesday that Williams and Wilmore will not be returning until June 26, extending their mission to at least 20 days as engineers race to get a better grasp on the problem while the spacecraft is safely attached to the space station.
While officials have said there is no reason to think Starliner won’t be able to return astronauts, Steve Stich, NASA’s commercial crew program manager, said at a press conference on Tuesday that “we want to work hard on the remaining data.”
Boeing, meanwhile, is trying to position the mission as a success and a learning opportunity, but the Starliner team has struggled with “unplanned” aspects of the mission, Mark Nappi, Boeing vice president and program manager for the Starliner program, said Tuesday.
The astronaut Extending one’s stay unexpectedly They could stay at the space station for days, weeks or even months. (Stich also said that Starliner could stay in the orbital laboratory for up to 45 days if necessary.)
But the incident adds to a long list of similar missteps by the Boeing Starliner program, which is already years behind schedule, creating uncertainty and embarrassment, and adding to a string of bad news that has long dogged the company.
Boeing and NASA engineers said they chose to leave Starliner and Williams and Wilmore on the space station longer than planned, primarily to conduct additional analysis. The helium leak and thruster problems occurred in parts of the vehicle that were never meant to survive a return from space, so the mission team is delaying the spacecraft’s return as part of a final effort to learn as much as possible about what went wrong.
Danger is always present when a spacecraft returns from orbit, perhaps the most dangerous leg of any space mission.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Pictured here, NASA’s Boeing crewed flight test Starliner spacecraft docks with the Harmony module’s forward port on June 13 as the International Space Station orbits 262 miles above Egypt’s Mediterranean coast.
The journey will require Starliner to plunge into Earth’s thick atmosphere at more than 22 times the speed of sound, a process that will heat the outside of the spacecraft to about 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Then, a parachute, which Boeing redesigned and tested in January, must safely slow the capsule before it hits the ground. (Starliner will be the first U.S.-made capsule to land on Earth with a parachute.) Landing on the ground Instead of splashing down on the ocean, the landing will be a step that Boeing hopes will make it easier to recover and refurbish the Starliner after flight.
Starliner’s journey to this historic manned test mission began in 2014, when NASA asked both Boeing and SpaceX to develop a spacecraft capable of carrying astronauts to the International Space Station.
At the time, Boeing was seen as the stalwart aerospace giant likely to get the job done first, while SpaceX was the unpredictable newcomer.
But over the past decade, the tide has shifted.
SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft completed its maiden crewed mission in 2020 with seemingly no problems, and the craft has been regularly ferrying astronauts and paying customers ever since.
Joel Kowski/NASA
On May 30, 2020, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched the company’s Crew Dragon spacecraft, carrying NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley to the International Space Station, marking the spacecraft’s first crewed flight.
The two astronauts who piloted Crew Dragon’s first flight, Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, also stayed aboard the space station longer than expected, staying more than 60 days, instead of the shorter stay expected for such a test flight.
But Hurley and Behnken’s stay was extended so astronauts could help with routine operations aboard the space station, which was short-staffed at the time, and was not directly related to any specific software or hardware issues with SpaceX’s Crew Dragon.
Meanwhile, spacecraft problems have plagued nearly every phase of Boeing’s Starliner program, which has faced years of delays, setbacks and added costs, costing the company more than $1 billion in losses, according to publicly available financial records.
Starliner’s first test mission, flown uncrewed in late 2019, was riddled with mishaps: The spacecraft misfired in orbit, a symptom of a software problem, and a coding error caused its internal clock to lose 11 hours.
The second Unmanned flight test in 2022 Additional software issues were identified, as well as problems with some of the craft’s thrusters.
Stich, a NASA program manager, said on June 6th Press conference It’s possible that engineers won’t have fully ironed out these issues until 2022.
“We thought we had the problem solved,” Stich said, adding, “I think we’re missing something fundamental that’s going on inside the thruster.”
Michael Lembeck, an associate professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who served as a consultant to Boeing’s spaceflight division from 2009 to 2014, told CNN it’s difficult to say whether additional ground tests would have uncovered any problems with the thrusters.
However, Lembeck stressed that assessing the success of this test mission is not as simple as comparing it directly with the first crewed test flight of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon.
For example, SpaceX’s Dragon cargo capsule (the predecessor to Crew Dragon) completed unmanned cargo missions to the space station for more than a decade before Crew Dragon flew, he said.
“SpaceX was ahead in the cargo program,” Lembeck said, “and I think they have an advantage that Boeing didn’t have, which is that Boeing has to build a crewed spacecraft from scratch.”
But if the Starliner test mission encounters further obstacles, Boeing could find itself having to turn to a rival to bring Williams and Wilmore home.
“The problem is that Crew Dragon has to go and retrieve the astronauts,” Lembeck said. “The spacecraft will launch with a crew of two and return with a crew of four. That will likely be the return route.”
Boeing executives have repeatedly sought to make clear that the Starliner program operates independently from the rest of the company, including its commercial planes division, which has been at the center of a long-running scandal.
“There are people on this ride, and we always take that seriously,” Nappi said. Breaking News April, before the Starliner flight.
Nappi also declared at the time that the Starliner team was operating at “peak performance” and was “genuinely looking forward to” carrying out a safe mission.
Asked about the allegations on Tuesday, Stich, the NASA official, said Boeing and NASA officials always expected to find more issues to work out during the test flight.
Williams said, Pre-flight press conference“We’re always finding stuff and we’ll continue to find stuff.”
“When you fly a spacecraft, not everything is perfect. … We feel very safe and secure in the way we fly this spacecraft, and we have back-up procedures in place in case we need to,” Williams said.
But Stich acknowledged Tuesday that Boeing and NASA could have prevented some of the problems Starliner encountered. “Maybe we could have done different testing on the ground to identify some of those (thruster issues) beforehand,” he said.