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NASA shuffles Crew-9 team that will bring Starliner crew home

NASA shuffles Crew-9 team that will bring Starliner crew home

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A lighter Crew-9 mission will head to the ISS on September 24th, while an uncrewed Starliner spacecraft will return next week.

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A photo showing the Starliner spacecraft docked at the ISS
Image: NASA

SpaceX’s Crew-9 mission will launch to the International Space Station with only NASA’s Nick Hague and Roscosmos’ Aleksandr Gorbunov onboard, according to an update on Friday. Crew-9 will launch “no earlier” than September 24th, with plans to bring delayed Starliner astronauts Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams back to Earth next February.

Wilmore and Williams arrived at the ISS in June and were only supposed to stay for about a week while conducting tests. However, helium leaks and valve issues on Boeing’s Starliner delayed their return, and NASA gave up on sending them back on the spacecraft altogether. The agency decided to bring Wilmore and Williams home on SpaceX’s Dragon capsule with the Crew-9 mission instead.

NASA says the other two US astronauts initially chosen for the mission, Zena Cardman and Stephanie Wilson, will be eligible for reassignment. The agency doesn’t specify why it split the crew up. Despite serving as a ride for Starliner’s astronauts, the two Crew-9 members will carry out their original goal of performing research at the ISS during their stay.

Now only Nick Hague (middle right) and Aleksandr Gorbunov (middle left) will be on Crew-9.
Now only Nick Hague (middle right) and Aleksandr Gorbunov (middle left) will be on Crew-9.
Image: NASA

“While we’ve changed crew before for a variety of reasons, downsizing crew for this flight was another tough decision to adjust to given that the crew has trained as a crew of four,” NASA chief astronaut Joe Acaba said in a statement. “I have the utmost confidence in all our crew, who have been excellent throughout training for the mission.”

Meanwhile, Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft will autonomously undock from the ISS on September 6th at 6:04PM. It won’t have anyone onboard, but teams on the ground will be ready to “remotely command the spacecraft” if needed. The spacecraft is set to land in New Mexico’s White Sands Space Harbor around six hours later.