Without astronauts, Boeing's Starliner returns to Earth
Boeing's Starliner
spacecraft landed uncrewed in a New Mexico desert late on Friday, capping a
three-month test mission hobbled by technical issues that forced the astronauts
it had flown to the International Space Station to remain there until next
year.
NASA astronauts Butch
Wilmore and Suni Williams, who became the first crew to fly Starliner in June,
remained on the ISS as Starliner autonomously undocked at 6:04 p.m. ET (2204
GMT) on Friday, beginning a six-hour trek to Earth using manoeuvring thrusters
that NASA last month deemed too risky for a crew.
Starliner returned to
Earth seemingly without a hitch, a NASA live stream showed, nailing the
critical final phase of its mission.
The spacecraft
reentered Earth's atmosphere at around 11 p.m. ET at orbital speeds of roughly
17,000 miles (27,400 km) per hour. About 45 minutes later, it deployed a series
of parachutes to slow its descent and inflated a set of airbags moments before
touching down at the White Sands Space Harbor, an arid desert in New Mexico.
Though the mission was
intended to be a final test flight before NASA certifies Starliner for routine
missions, the agency's decision last month to keep astronauts off the capsule
over safety concerns threw the spacecraft's certification path into
uncertainty, despite the clean return Boeing executed.
Wilmore and Williams,
stocked with extra food and supplies on the ISS, will return to Earth on a
SpaceX vehicle in February 2025. What was initially supposed to be an eight-day
test has turned into an eight-month mission for the crew.
The ISS, a football
field-sized science lab some 250 miles (402 km) in space, has seven other
astronauts on board who arrived at different times on other spacecraft,
including a Russian Soyuz capsule. Wilmore and Williams are expected to
continue doing science experiments with their crewmates.
Five of Starliner's 28
manoeuvring thrusters failed with Wilmore and Williams on board during their
approach to the ISS in June, while the same propulsion system sprang several
leaks of helium, which is used to pressurize the thrusters.
Despite successfully
docking on June 6, the failures set off a monthslong investigation by Boeing -
with some help from NASA - that has cost the company $125 million, bringing
total cost overruns on the Starliner program just above $1.6 billion since
2016, according to a Reuters analysis of securities filings.
Boeing's Starliner
woes have persisted since the spacecraft failed a 2019 test trip to the ISS
without a crew. Starliner did a re-do mission in 2022 and largely succeeded,
though some of its thrusters malfunctioned.
The aerospace giant's
Starliner woes represent the latest struggle that calls
into question Boeing's future in space, a domain it had dominated for
decades until Elon Musk's SpaceX began offering cheaper launches for satellites
and astronauts and reshaped the way NASA works with private companies.
Boeing will recover
the Starliner capsule after its touchdown and continue its investigation into
why the thrusters failed in space.
But the section that
housed Starliner's thrusters - the "service module" trunk that
provides in-space manoeuvring capabilities - detached from the capsule as
designed just before it plunged into Earth's atmosphere.
The service module
bearing the faulty thrusters burned up in the atmosphere as planned, meaning
Boeing will rely on simulated tests to figure out what went wrong with the
hardware in space.
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