Home Explainer Astronauts Butch And Sunita Prepare To Return Home After Nine Months

Astronauts Butch And Sunita Prepare To Return Home After Nine Months

A Crew Dragon capsule from Elon Musk's SpaceX will be their ride home, part of a contingency plan devised by NASA last year.
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Veteran NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, stranded on the International Space Station (ISS) for nine months, are set to begin their long-awaited return to Earth early on Tuesday morning, concluding an unusual mission.

After a replacement crew arrived on the space station Saturday night, Butch Wilmore, Sunita Williams and two other astronauts are poised to undock from the ISS at 1:05 a.m. ET (0505 GMT) Tuesday to begin a 17-hour trip back to Earth.

Drawn-Out Saga

The space station departure is the start of a highly anticipated end to the drawn-out saga of โ€œButch and Suniโ€, who had been part of a key test mission with Boeingโ€™s Starliner spacecraft that went wrong last year. The mission was initially expected to last eight days.

A Crew Dragon capsule from Elon Muskโ€™s SpaceX will be their ride home, part of a contingency plan devised by NASA last year.

The failed test mission was another blow to Boeingโ€™s space unit, which has struggled for years to bring Starliner to market to compete with SpaceXโ€™s Crew Dragon, a dominant vehicle in the global human spaceflight domain.

More recently, U.S. President Donald Trump and his close adviser Elon Musk โ€“ SpaceXโ€™s CEO โ€“ have sought to blame without evidence former President Joe Biden for the astronautsโ€™ plight, adding political drama to an already unusual situation for NASAโ€™s human spaceflight programme.

17-Hour Journey

After their autonomous undocking from the ISS, the astronaut crew is scheduled to splash down in the Gulf of Mexico at 5:57 p.m. ET Tuesday, with the exact location depending on local weather conditions. They will be flown to NASAโ€™s Johnson Space Center for a few days of routine post-mission medical checks.


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Wilmore and Williams were the first crew to fly Boeingโ€™s Starliner in a test flight for the capsule in June.

After issues with the craftโ€™s propulsion system, NASA deemed it too risky to bring the astronaut duo back home and opted to fold them into the agencyโ€™s Crew-9 mission instead. Starliner returned to Earth empty in September.

NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, the other two members of Crew-9, flew to the ISS in September on a Crew Dragon craft with two empty seats. They will join Wilmore and Williams on Tuesdayโ€™s return trip.

NASA previously planned to return Crew-9 on Wednesday night, but unfavourable weather later in the week would have complicated the Crew Dragon capsuleโ€™s return, leading the agency to move the return trip up to Tuesday.

Extended Mission

Wilmore and Williamsโ€™ mission turned into a normal NASA rotation to the ISS and they have been doing scientific research and conducting routine maintenance with the stationโ€™s other five astronauts.

The ISS, about 254 miles in altitude, is a football field-sized research lab that has been housed continuously by international crews of astronauts for nearly 25 years, a key platform of science diplomacy mainly managed by the U.S. and Russia.

(With inputs from Reuters)