Boeing has delayed the first flight of the Starliner spacecraft with two American astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) due to a technical problem, news agencies reported. The countdown stopped two hours before the scheduled launch from Florida’s Cape Canaveral.
Kennedy Space Center
6:27 am May 7, 2024
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Print
Copy the url address
Abbreviated address
Copy to clipboard
Close
This happened, according to the AP agency, at the moment when the astronauts – 61-year-old commander Barry “Butch” Wilmore and 58-year-old pilot Sunita Williams – were strapped to seats in the spaceship.
A valve on the upper stage of the Atlas V launch vehicle that was supposed to launch the spacecraft into orbit has malfunctioned, the rocket’s maker, a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin United Launch Alliance (ULA), said.
“NASA’s priority is safety,” the head of the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Bill Nelson immediately responded. According to him, the launch will take place “as soon as we are ready”.
No date for the new start has been announced yet, AFP noted.
If successful, the American manufacturer of aerospace technology would get a chance to compete with SpaceX, which has so far provided all astronaut launches from home for the American space program.
The basis for commercial flights
Among other things, the astronauts’ task during the first test flight will be to test the manual control of the craft, which is otherwise designed for fully automatic flight. The astronauts are scheduled to stay on the ISS for about a week before returning to Earth and landing by parachute in the desert of the southwestern United States.
The Boeing case: a fallen piece of aircraft, the apparent suicide of a whistleblower and many questions
Read the article
The mission, whose cost over the years of development and after years of test flight delays exceeded the established budget by more than a billion dollars, is a preliminary step to the approval of the spacecraft for regular commercial flights.
Boeing, facing numerous crises in the aviation sector, is trying to compete with SpaceX and its Crew Dragon module with the Starliner. As of 2020, this is the only means of getting NASA astronauts into orbit from American territory.
The first unmanned test flight in 2019 failed to put the Starliner into the correct orbit and thus did not even dock with the ISS. Later, the manufacturer had to deal with problems with parachutes slowing down the landing of the ship.
The US space agency is trying to create a broad portfolio of private companies that will carry astronauts into space for it. Commercial vessels will transport crews not only to the ISS, but in the future as part of the Artemis program to the Moon and finally, according to the most ambitious plans, to Mars.
CTK
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Print
Copy the url address
Abbreviated address
Copy to clipboard
Close
Tags: astronauts strapped flight Starliner iRADIO
-