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Stranded NASA astronaut contacts Houston to report ‘strange’ noise aboard the ISS

One of the stranded NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station has reported a ‘strange noise’ coming from Boeing’s Starliner aircraft.

Butch Wilmore contacted Johnson Space Center in Houston to share his concerns just days before the aircraft is set to undock from the ISS, empty, and attempt to return to Earth on autopilot.

‘I’ve got a question about Starliner. There’s a strange noise coming through the speaker and I didn’t know if you can connect into the Starliner… I don’t know what’s making it’, he said. 

Mission control confirms to Butch they can configure a way for the sound to be played. Wilmore then holds the phone up to the Starliner’s speakers and a sound can be heard.

After a failed first attempt, mission control responds: ‘Butch, that one came through. It was kind of like a pulsating noise, almost like a sonar ping’.

Wilmore and fellow astronaut Suni Williams (pictured) have been marooned on the ISS since June 5 when they arrived on Boeing’s aircraft for what was supposed to be a week-long stay. But the Starliner is now set to return to Earth without them after being plagued by thruster troubles and helium leaks

Wilmore contacted Johnson Space Center in Houston about what he called a 'strange noise' just days before they undock from the ISS, empty, and attempt to return to earth on autopilot

Wilmore contacted Johnson Space Center in Houston about what he called a ‘strange noise’ just days before they undock from the ISS, empty, and attempt to return to earth on autopilot

Butch plays the sound one more time which successfully is received by mission control. 

‘I’ll let you figure it out,’ Wilmore says. 

‘Good recording, thanks Butch,’ mission control replies. ‘We will pass it onto the team and let you know what we find.’ 

They ask one more time if there’s any other noise and confirm it is in fact emanating from the speaker. 

Wilmore and fellow astronaut Suni Williams have been marooned on the ISS since June 5 when they arrived on Boeing’s aircraft for what was supposed to be a week-long stay. But the Starliner is now set to return to Earth without them after being plagued by thruster troubles and helium leaks. 

The pair are not due to return back to Earth until 2025 – when one of Elon Musk’s SpaceX ships is scheduled to ferry them home. 

In the latest audio about the problem aircraft, Wilmore tells Mission Control he hopes they will ‘scratch your heads and see if you can figure out what’s going on.’

Mission Control can only tell Wilmore that they’ll pass the news along and report back if they figure anything out. 

Williams and Wilmore launched toward the ISS aboard Boeing’s Starliner three months ago.

The scandal-laden Starliner – which was built and developed using over $4 billion of taxpayer money – was beset by technical difficulties in the weeks leading up to launch, and even on the day of.

The spacecraft safely delivered Williams and Wilmore to the ISS, but by the time it got there, it had sprung more helium leaks and five of its 28 thrusters had failed.

In a press conference on August 24, NASA officials announced that it would be too risky to bring the astronauts home on faulty Starliner. 

Instead, they will return home on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft, which is scheduled to launch NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov toward the ISS on September 24, according to a NASA statement released last week. 

Suni Williams (pictued) and Wilmore launched toward the ISS aboard Boeing's Starliner on June 5

Suni Williams (pictued) and Wilmore launched toward the ISS aboard Boeing’s Starliner on June 5

The scandal-laden Starliner - which was built and developed using over $4 billion of taxpayer money - had been plagued by helium leaks and thruster issues in the weeks leading up to launch, and even on the day of

The scandal-laden Starliner – which was built and developed using over $4 billion of taxpayer money – had been plagued by helium leaks and thruster issues in the weeks leading up to launch, and even on the day of

The means that Williams and Wilmore will remain on the ISS until February 2025 at the earliest. 

Their empty Starliner capsule is set to undock early next month and will attempt to return on autopilot and land in the New Mexico desert.

The decision was humiliating for Boeing, which has struggled for years to get their Starliner program off the ground only to be bailed out at the eleventh hour by their biggest competitor. 

‘We have had so many embarrassments lately, we’re under a microscope. This just made it, like, 100 times worse,’ one employee anonymously told the New York Post. 

‘We hate SpaceX,’ he added. ‘We talk s*** about them all the time, and now they’re bailing us out.’

At this point, it’s unclear whether Starliner will ever be able to complete a crewed mission to the ISS.  

NASA is planning to decommission the ISS by 2030, giving Boeing just five years to fix Starliner’s technical issues and successfully send and return astronauts to space.

To put that in perspective, it’s already been five years since Starliner’s first failed uncrewed test flight. 

But it’s possible that Boeing could retire Starliner before they even hit that deadline, as the company has already sunk $1.6 billion into the spacecraft’s development. 

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