The two Starliner astronauts said Friday they had no regrets about NASA's decision to extend their mission and to bring their spacecraft back to Earth without them, saying they had turned the page ...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Stuck-in-space astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams said Friday it's been tough dealing with their Boeing ride leaving without them and the prospect of spending ...
The Polaris Dawn astronauts have exited the SpaceX Dragon capsule to expose themselves to the void of space while 435 miles above Earth. Early Thursday, the crew began final preparations to ...
Their mission was extended from about 10 days to 8 months. Boeing Starliner's first astronaut crew will speak from orbit today (Sept. 13) for the first time in two months, a week after their ...
They’re temporary extraterrestrials about to phone home. The NASA astronauts already trapped in space for months are due to call Earth on Friday afternoon to discuss their ongoing plight that ...
A skull found in Thurston County in 1981 now has a sketch and description due to advancements in technology and genealogy.
Being stranded in space isn’t going to stop veteran astronauts Sunita “Suni” Williams and Butch Wilmore from voting — with the pair planning to cast their ballots in the presidential ...
The return marked an end to a long-delayed and issue-ridden mission, which launched with two NASA astronauts, but returned with none. It turns out they would have been totally fine. Despite the ...
Just ask aeronautical engineer, astronaut, and aquanaut Nicole Stott. She’s spent 104 days in space on the Space Station and Space Shuttle and plenty of time underwater, partially in preparation ...
Boeing’s first astronaut mission ended Friday night with an empty capsule landing and two test pilots still in space, left behind until next year because NASA judged their return too risky.
7, about three months after it launched on June 5 with the two astronauts onboard Abigail Adams is a Human Interest Writer and Reporter for PEOPLE. She has been working in journalism for seven years.
That means astronauts on the International Space Station age slower than people on Earth. The effect is minuscule, though, amounting to only fractions of a second. Astronauts Butch Wilmore and ...