Crew-9, Starliner CFT astronauts returning to Earth aboard Crew Dragon
Date:
Tue, 18 Mar 2025 20:19:24 +0000
Description:
After more than nine months in space, the crew of the Boeing Crew Flight Test  The post Crew-9, Starliner CFT astronauts returning to Earth aboard Crew  Dragon appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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After more than nine months in space, the crew of the Boeing Crew Flight Test  mission are ready to return home. Barry Butch Wilmore and Sunita Suni 
Williams boarded SpaceX Crew Dragon C212 Freedom and undocked from the  International Space Station on March 17, and are set to splash down off the  coast of Florida on March 18. 
They are joined by NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut 
Aleksandr Gorbunov, who launched on Freedom , which contained two empty seats  that are now being used by Wilmore and Williams, back in September 2024 for  NASAs Crew-9 mission. 
 
This mission will mark SpaceXs final east coast splashdown, with all future  Dragon recovery operations moving out to the Pacific Ocean. This follows  incidents with other reentries that saw Crew Dragons trunk, an unpressurized  segment of the spacecraft that must be jettisoned before encountering reentry  heating, landing outside of predicted areas. Debris from previous Dragon  trunks have been found in places like Australia. 
 Freedom undocked from the space-facing docking port on the Stations Harmony  module at 05:05 UTC on Tuesday, March 18. Dragon and its four crew members 
are expected to splash down just before 6:00 PM EDT (22:00 UTC). With an  on-time splashdown, Wilmore and Williams will have spent 286 consecutive days  in space for the mission. The Crew-9 astronauts onboard their return capsule  prior to undocking. (Credit: NASA) 
The two Boeing Crew Flight Test (CFT) astronauts have been on a long journey  since their initial launch aboard a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V from  Cape Canaveral on June 5, 2024. 
The launch suffered several delays, including a small helium leak in the  service module noted on the first launch attempt in May. Located inside of 
one of the reaction control system thrusters onboard the vehicle that help  with in-orbit maneuvers and deorbiting, the issue revealed an additional  design vulnerability that led to the creation of an additional deorbit  procedure in the event of further problems. One such problem could have seen  eight orbital maneuvering thrusters unable to perform a deorbit burn, leaving  Starliner in orbit. 
After a second launch scrub due to a ground computer issue, Starliner finally  launched on what was expected to be an eight-to-10-day mission. During the  first hours of the flight, helium leaks were noticed in the propulsion 
system. Eventually, five leaks were discovered, but the leak rate was slow  enough that the mission could proceed to rendezvous and docking operations. 
 
NSFs Sawyer Rosenstein asked officials about the mission duration in June 
2024 and if any in-flight events would lead to a mission extension shortly  after the launch. 
You [have got to] check out the system and see what the system gives you,  deputy associate administrator for NASAs Space Operations Mission Directorate  Joel Montalbano responded. If you see something unexpected and were like, hey  another day would allow some extra time to go look at that extra system, then  wed stayits more watch how the system operates and if we need more time, we  have more time. 
As Starliner, named Calypso , began its rendezvous procedure, five thrusters  failed. Teams noticed a severe degradation in thrust from the thrusters, and  controllers needed to try to get them back online as soon as possible. Four  were eventually returned to service. The Boeing CFT mission launches aboard a  ULA Atlas V N22. (Credit: Sawyer Rosenstein for NSF) 
This began a series of multiple mission extensions as crews discussed 
possible solutions to the thruster issues. Eventually, teams were faced with  deciding whether to return Starliner with its two crew members or leave them  aboard the Station and send Calypso home empty. 
Starliner was initially rated for a 45-day stay at the Station when docked to  the Harmony node modules forward port. Mid-August was defined as the cutoff  point for a decision if necessary, and, as July turned into August, there was  still no consensus on whether Calypso should be brought home with its crew. 
Tests conducted on the ground were able to recreate the thruster degradation  seen during ascent and docking, and engineers believe the issue was likely  caused by bulging seals in an oxidizer valve, restricting propellant flow to  the thrusters. Starliner Calypso undocks from the ISS uncrewed, as seen  through the window of a SpaceX Crew Dragon. (Credit: NASA) 
The biggest concern, however, was how the thrusters would perform during  reentry, where attitude control and precision are critical as the spacecrafts  exterior faces temperatures of nearly 2,000 degrees Celsius. 
With Wilmore and Williams mission continuing to face extensions, Calypso was  reaching its cutoff point. Despite arguments from Boeing officials, NASA  officials came to a unanimous decision and announced on Aug. 24 that they  would return Starliner uncrewed. 
Bringing Calypso home uncrewed meant that the upcoming Crew-9 mission would  need to launch with two empty seats, which the two CFT astronauts would fill  during Crew-9s return. 
Since Calypso occupied the docking port the Crew-9 Dragon would need,  Starliner would have to depart the Station before Crew-9 arrived. This led to  questions regarding an emergency egress option for Butch and Suni in the 
event of an emergency on the Station. It was determined that two makeshift  seats could be made in a cargo area inside the pressurized Crew-8 Dragon  Endeavour . The uncrewed Starliner Calypso under three main chutes before  landing at White Sands, New Mexico, to conclude the CFT mission. (Credit: 
NASA TV) 
Starliner undocked and landed safely within a designated zone at White Sands,  New Mexico, on Sept. 6, 2024. This allowed for the launch of Crew-9 on Dragon  Freedom just a few weeks later, on Sept. 28. See Also Crew-9 Updates NSF 
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Before the seating changes due to the issues with Boeing CFT, NASA astronauts  Zena Cardman and Stephanie Wilson were scheduled to fly on Crew-9 with  commander Nick Hague and cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov. Cardman and Wilson 
were removed from Crew-9 to make room for the CFT astronauts, and Hague and  Gorbunov launched with two empty seats inside Freedom. The pair docked to the  ISS on Sept. 29. 
Between the Crew-8 emergency egress contingency plan and the arrival of  Crew-9, Wilmore and Williams were never without a ride home. Had something  gone wrong, the two astronauts would have always had a safe option to return  to Earth. With that in mind, NASA incorporated them into the Expedition 71/72  crew and extended their time on the Station. 
Williams would go on to command the ISS and complete a spacewalk, making her  the all-time leader amongst female astronauts in extravehicular activity 
(EVA) experience, with a total of 62 hours and six minutes spent outside the  Station. 
The CFT crews Boeing spacesuits were incompatible with SpaceXs Dragon 
systems. Thus, Wilmore and Williams would need SpaceX spacesuits for their  return, with Williams using a suit already onboard the Station and Wilmore  receiving a custom suit via a cargo resupply mission. Should the Crew-8  emergency egress event have occurred, the crew would have used spare suits  aboard the ISS. Suni Williams conducts a spacewalk outside the ISS on Jan. 
16, 2025. (Credit: NASA) 
As is tradition, SpaceX and NASA plan for a handover period in which an  incoming and outgoing crew are docked at the same time. That meant Crew-9  would return once the next flight, Crew-10 and its Crew Dragon, Endurance ,  lifted off and arrived at the ISS. 
After a month delay following issues with a new Crew Dragon capsule that was  ultimately swapped for Endurance , Crew-10 lifted off from Launch Complex 39A  (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on March 14, docking to the  station 28 hours later. 
Associate administrator for NASAs Space Operations Mission Directorate Ken  Bowersox noted in a press conference following the launch of Crew-10 that 
this was the largest percentage extension of any mission based on the  originally planned duration. 
Bowersox has personal experience with the situation in which Wilmore and  Williams are in. Launching aboard Space Shuttle Endeavour in November 2002, 
he was set to return aboard a future Space Shuttle mission. His mission was  forced to be extended following the STS-107 Columbia disaster, which grounded  the Space Shuttle fleet. He would later return home on the Soyuz TMA-1  spacecraft, which returned in May 2003. 
 
Using his experience, he says the astronauts are not worried about that  percentage extension. 
Every astronaut that launches into space, we teach them dont think about when  youre going home, think about how well your mission is going and if youre  lucky, you might get to stay longer, Bowersox said. On my last flight, I did  get to stay a little bit longer than was planned, and I was so happy I did 
get to stay longer The only time [Don Pettit] and I ever came close to an  argument was when we argued about who might get to stay longer. 
 (Lead image: Crew Dragon Freedom undocks from the ISS with the four crew  members of Crew-9. Credit: NASA) 
 
The post Crew-9, Starliner CFT astronauts returning to Earth aboard Crew  Dragon appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/03/crew-9-return/
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