Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore have been aboard the International Space Station since June. Here's what to know about the plan to bring them home.
NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore reported hearing an odd pulsing sound from Boeing's Starliner spacecraft that is currently docked to the International Space Station. Credit: Space.com | image & audio cou
The Crew-9 mission, consisting of NASA astronauts Nick Hague, Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, along with Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, is set to return to Earth after a brief handover period with the newly arrived Crew-10 expedition crew, pending weather conditions at the splashdown sites off the coast of Florida.
NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore recently said that politics has nothing to do with why he and his crewmate, Suni Williams, are still in space.
The four crew of SpaceX Crew-10 arrived to Kennedy Space Center on Thursday. They will launch to the International Space Station next week and relieve the Crew-9 members including two stuck Boeing
Daryn Wilmore, 16, says she’s frustrated over her astronaut dad Butch’s unscheduled nine-month stay on the International Space Station due to “issue after issue after
Crew-9 launched with Hague and Gorbunov and two empty seats for Williams and Wilmore on the return journey, aboard SpaceX's Crew Dragon Freedom. Freedom has been docked to the ISS since its arrival in late September, and will serve as the ride home for all four astronauts a week or so following Crew-10's docking.
And so, the long, long, way too long ordeal of the astronauts with aerospace stock Boeing’s (BA) Starliner project are finally preparing to go
Stranded NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams will return to Earth after being in space since June 2024 for a mission originally slated for 8 days.
After a handover period on the ISS, Wilmore and Williams will join Crew-9 for a return trip inside the Dragon with splashdown off the Florida coastline.
The president is trying to pull a political stunt by claiming to rescue the two astronauts, but the Starliner crew shut it down.
NASA astronaut Barry "Butch" Wilmore's teenage daughter Daryn Wilmore said it's "mentally exhausting" to have her dad be stuck in space since June 2024.