Skip to main content

2024 couldn’t have turned out any weirder for these two ISS astronauts

NASA’s Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts (from top) Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams inside the vestibule between the forward port on the International Space Station’s Harmony module and the Starliner spacecraft.
NASA’s Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts (from top) Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams inside the vestibule between the forward port on the International Space Station’s Harmony module and the Starliner spacecraft. NASA

When NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in June, they expected to stay for just eight days before returning to Earth. But they’re still there.

The pair were testing out Boeing’s new Starliner spacecraft and were the first crew to fly aboard the vehicle. But their mission took an unexpected turn when technical issues emerged with the spaceship’s thrusters, and helium leaks were also detected. The problems prompted NASA officials to extend Wilmore and Williams’ stay aboard the space station while engineers tried to determine if the Starliner was safe enough to bring them home.

Recommended Videos

As the investigations continued, days turned into weeks. In August, NASA announced that the two astronauts would not be coming home on the Starliner and would instead have to hitch a ride on a returning SpaceX Crew Dragon, carrying the Crew-9 astronauts, in February 2025 at the earliest. The Starliner, meanwhile, was brought back to Earth uncrewed in September, with NASA’s commercial crew program manager Steve Stich describing the homecoming as “darn near flawless.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Stich added: “From a human perspective, all of us feel happy about the successful landing, but then there’s a piece of us … that [wishes] it would have been the way we had planned it … with Butch and Suni on board.”

In a further twist, NASA said just last week that Crew-9 would not be returning to Earth until March at the earliest. The decision to delay the return of Crew-9 — with Wilmore and Williams on board — makes possible a handover period with the incoming Crew-10 astronauts, during which the existing crew can help the new arrivals ease into their stay aboard the orbital outpost.

Wilmore and Williams appear to have stayed positive about the unexpected situation, with the eight-day mission now having lasted more than six months. “You have to turn the page and look at the next opportunity,” Williams said in September. “We’re actually excited to fly in two different spacecraft … We’re testers”

Commenting in the same interview, Wilmore said he and Williams were “very fortunate” to be able to safely stay on the ISS for an extended period and to be able to return to Earth using a backup option, adding: “There’s many cases in the past where there have not been other options.”

So, rather than spending the holidays with their families and friends as they’d originally expected, Wilmore and Williams remain 250 miles above Earth, in microgravity conditions, perhaps dreaming about when they might actually get back to terra firma.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch SpaceX fire up Starship spacecraft engines ahead of 7th test flight
SpaceX performing a static fire test of its Starship rocket in December 2024.

SpaceX has shared a video (below) showing a static fire test of its Starship spacecraft at the spaceflight company’s Starbase site near Boca Chica, Texas.

https://x.com/SpaceX/status/1868436135468552361

Read more
Watch the space station send the first wooden satellite into orbit
Japan's LignoSat being deployed from the ISS.

The world’s first wooden satellite has been deployed to Earth orbit from the International Space Station (ISS). The ISS Research X account posted footage of a trio of CubeSats, including Japan’s LignoSat, recently emerging from the orbital outpost into the vacuum of space.

https://x.com/ISS_Research/status/1867711109983039958

Read more
NASA orbiter captures one last image of retired InSight lander on Mars
This illustration shows NASA's InSight spacecraft with its instruments deployed on the Martian surface.

NASA's Insight lander spent four years on the surface of Mars, uncovering secrets of the planet's interior, but it eventually succumbed to the most martian of environmental threats: dust. Mars has periodic dust storms that can whip up into huge global events, lifting dust up into the air and then dumping it on everything in sight -- including solar panels. After years of accumulation, eventually the dust was so thick that Insight's solar panels could no longer generate enough power to keep it operational, and the mission officially came to an end in December 2022.

That wasn't quite the end of the story for InSight, though, as it is still being used for science to this day, albeit indirectly. Recently, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) caught a glimpse of InSight from orbit, capturing the lander's dusty surroundings and showing how even more dust had built up on it.

Read more