NASA, Starliner and Boeing
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
“We were always coming back, and I think people need to know that.”
From Digital Trends
Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, the two astronauts who recently spent more time in space than originally planned, open up about life back on Earth and share the first things they did after returning ...
From Yahoo
“I wouldn’t characterize as they failed us. I would characterize it as, there was a huge team working together diligently to try to weigh all the risks of putting people in a spacecraft for the very ...
From HuffPost
Read more on News Digest
20hon MSN
Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who only recently returned after a nine-month stint in space, discussed their return to Earth.
Starliner returned autonomously in early September. Since then, NASA and Boeing have been reviewing data from the test flight. (Unfortunately, the errant thrusters were located on the service module of the spacecraft, which is jettisoned before reentry and was not recovered.)
NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore put some of the blame on himself when asked who was responsible for Boeing Starliner’s failure on last year’s Crew Flight Test.
"India is amazing from space, We captured Himalayas, Its very colorful." Astronaut Sunita Williams recalls the beauty of Earth from space in their first media interview. Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore returned to Earth after spending 286 days unplanned in space.
1d
NewsNation on MSNStarliner, Crew-9 astronauts to speak to pressAstronauts from Crew-9 and the Starliner test flight will speak to reporters Monday afternoon about their time spent on the International Space Station. Astronauts Nick Hague. Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore will answer questions about their time in space.
Explore more
While the Starliner might have been one of the greatest debacles in the history of aerospace stock Boeing (BA), it will not go gently into that