- CONTACT US
- AFS
- Business
- Bussiness
- Car
- Career
- Celebrity
- Digital Products
- Education
- Entertainment
- Fashion
- Film
- Food
- Games
- General Health
- Health
- Health Awareness
- Healthy
- Healthy Lifestyle
- History Facts
- Household Appliances
- Internet
- Investment
- Law
- Lifestyle
- Loans&Mortgages
- Luxury Life Style
- movie
- Music
- Nature
- News
- Opinion
- panorama
- Pet
- Plant
- Politics
- promis
- Recommends
- Science
- Self-care
- services
- Smart Phone
- sport
- Sports
- Style
- Technology
- tire
- Travel
- US
- World

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Boeing and NASA have agreed to keep astronauts off the company’s next Starliner flight and instead perform a trial run with cargo to prove its safety.
Monday’s announcement comes eight months after the first and only Starliner crew returned to Earth aboard SpaceX after a prolonged mission. Although NASA test pilots Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams managed to dock Starliner to the International Space Station in 2024, the capsule had so many problems that NASA ordered it to come back empty, leaving the astronauts stuck there for more than nine months.
Engineers have since been poring over the thruster and other issues that plagued the Starliner capsule. Its next cargo run to the space station will occur no earlier than April, pending additional tests and certification.
Boeing said in a statement that it remains committed to the Starliner program with safety the highest priority.
NASA is also slashing the planned number of Starliner flights, from six to four. If the cargo mission goes well, then that will leave the remaining three Starliner flights for crew exchanges before the space station is decommissioned in 2030.
“NASA and Boeing are continuing to rigorously test the Starliner propulsion system in preparation for two potential flights next year,” NASA’s commercial crew program manager Steve Stich said in a statement.
NASA hired Boeing and SpaceX in 2014 — three years after the final space shuttle flight — to ferry astronauts to and from the orbiting outpost. The Boeing contract was worth $4.2 billion and SpaceX’s $2.6 billion.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX launched its first astronaut mission for NASA in 2020. Its 12th crew liftoff for NASA was this summer.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Melanie Müller: Ex-Dschungelkönigin wieder vor Gericht wegen Hitlergruß und Drogenfund - 2
Andrea Kiewel im TV: HIER ist die Moderatorin im Fernsehen zu sehen - 3
Mario Barth im TV: Aktuelle Fernsehauftritte im TV-Guide - 4
Mary Roos im TV: HIER ist die Sängerin im Fernsehen zu sehen - 5
Palina Rojinski im TV: Die Termine für ihre nächsten TV-Auftritte
Understanding climate change in America: Skepticism, dogmatism and personal experience
Scientists detect X-ray glow from interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS extending 250,000 miles into space
Hubble Space Telescope spies dusty debris from two cosmic collisions
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS to pass closest to Earth on Friday
Watch interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS make its closest approach to Earth in free livestream on Dec. 18
Saturn's moon Titan may not have a buried ocean as long suspected, new study suggests
Surprise! Saturn's huge moon Titan may not have a buried ocean after all
Why this Iranian island looks like Mars after it rains
As reefs vanish, assisted coral fertilization offers hope in the Dominican Republic
The next frontier in space is closer than you think – welcome to the world of very low Earth orbit satellites














