Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 13 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

No link to story available

Nasa Delays Return of Boeing Starliner From Space Station for More Technical Checks

Accepted submission by upstart at 2024-06-22 10:38:24
News

████ # This file was generated bot-o-matically! Edit at your own risk. ████

Nasa delays return of Boeing Starliner from space station for more technical checks [straitstimes.com]:

WASHINGTON - Nasa has further postponed the Boeing Starliner’s return to Earth from the International Space Station (ISS) with its first crew of astronauts to allow more time for review of technical issues encountered, the agency said on June 22.

It did not set a new date, raising questions about the timing of the return of the two astronauts on Boeing’s first crewed mission, which had initially been set for June 26 [straitstimes.com], itself a pushback from the first potential date of June 14.

“Mission managers are evaluating future return opportunities following the station’s two planned spacewalks on June 24 and July 2,” Nasa said in a statement.

US astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams lifted off on June 5 as a final demonstration to obtain routine flight certification from Nasa.

“We are taking our time and following our standard mission management team process,” said Dr Steve Stich, Nasa’s commercial crew programme manager.

“Starliner is performing well in orbit while docked to the space station,” Dr Stich said, adding that the additional time would yield “valuable insight” into system upgrades for future missions.

The crewed test of the spacecraft, test-flown to space two times since 2019 without humans on board, has encountered five failures of its 28 manoeuvring thrusters, five leaks of helium gas meant to pressurise those thrusters, and a slow-moving propellant valve that signalled unfixed past issues.

The issues and the additional tests run by Nasa and Boeing call into question when exactly Starliner’s crew will be able to make the roughly six-hour return journey home, and add to the programme’s broader problems.

Boeing has spent US$1.5 billion (S$2 billion) in cost overruns beyond its US$4.5 billion Nasa development contract.

Nasa wants Starliner to become a second US spacecraft capable of ferrying astronauts to and from the ISS, alongside SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, its primary ride since 2020.

But Boeing’s Starliner programme has battled software glitches, design problems and sub-contractor disputes for years.

When Starliner arrived in the space station’s vicinity [straitstimes.com] to dock on June 6, the five thruster failures prevented a close approach by the spacecraft until Boeing made a fix. It rewrote software and tweaked some procedures to revive four of them and proceed with a docking.

Starliner’s undocking and return to Earth represent the spacecraft’s most complicated phases of its test mission.

Nasa officials have said they want to better understand the cause of the thruster failures, valve issue and helium leaks before Starliner begins its return.

While just one thruster remains dead in Starliner’s current flight, Boeing encountered four thruster problems during the capsule’s uncrewed return from space in 2022.

Flight rules set by Boeing and Nasa require Starliner’s manoeuvring thrusters to allow for “six degrees of freedom of control” at a minimum, and each have one backup thruster, a Nasa spokesperson told Reuters.

That could mean at least 12 of the 28 thrusters, most of them backups, are required for a safe flight. REUTERS


Original Submission