TechCrunch Space: The Starliner saga comes to a close — for now

2 months ago 26
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Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. NASA leadership have made their decision: Starliner will be coming back to Earth — empty. More on that below.

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Story of the week

After months of data analysis and internal deliberation, NASA leadership announced on Saturday that Starliner will be coming back to Earth in September, without a crew. Meanwhile, astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams will remain on-board the International Space Station until February 2025, when they will return on SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft as part of the Crew-9 mission.

“Spaceflight is risky, even at its safest and most routine,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “A test flight, by nature, is neither safe, nor routine. The decision to keep Butch and Suni aboard the International Space Station and bring Boeing’s Starliner home uncrewed is the result of our commitment to safety: our core value and our North Star.”

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. Image Credits: Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo / AFP / Getty Images

Launchers to come

As the global appetite for orbital launches continues to grow, the competition among new and old space companies to build bigger and better launch vehicles is firing up. ICYMI, here’s my overview of the medium-, heavy- and super-heavy lift rocket landscape, from vehicles that are currently operational to those rockets yet to fly. 

 Starship, New Glenn, Neutron, and Terran R.From left: Starship, New Glenn, Neutron and Terran R.Image Credits: SpaceX, Blue Origin, Rocket Lab, Relativity

This week in space history

NASA’s probe Voyager 2 made its closest encounter to Saturn on August 26, 1981, at a range of just 63,000 miles. Voyager 2 is such a cool mission: The little probe did flybys of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, and became the second spacecraft to enter interstellar space, or the space between stars. By the time it concluded observations in the Saturn system on September 28, the spacecraft had transmitted 16,000 images of the planet and the surrounding space.

SaturnImage Credits: NASA
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