American Space Agency NASA’s Astronaut Sunita Williams and Buch Wilmore are scheduled to return to Earth on Tuesday i.e. March 18. His visit to Earth has begun today after being stuck on the International Space Station (ISS) for nine months.
NASA has also done live coverage for the Earth’s side. In this, Sunita Williams and Buch Willmore were shown posing for their final photos at the station before packing their belongings to start a 17 -hour journey towards Earth on Tuesday morning.
After its ignorance from the ISS, astronauts will land in the Gulf of Mexico at 5:57 pm on Tuesday evening. The exact location for this landing will depend on the local weather conditions. Explain that after returning to Earth, both astronauts will be taken to NASA’s Johnson Space Center for regular post-mission medical examination for a few days.
Let us know that NASA astronaut Sunita Williams and Buch Willmore Alan Musk’s crew is about to return to the earth with a dragon capsule. Both astronauts are part of the plan prepared by NASA last year, which was prepared after the failure of the Boeing Starlineer capsule carrying them to the station in June.
NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Russian astronaut Alexander Gorbunov, Crew-9, in September, flew to ISS with two vacant crew dragon vehicles in September. He joined Wilmore and Williams in Tuesday’s return journey. Significantly, NASA had planned to bring back the first crew-9 on Wednesday night, but at the end of the week, due to adverse weather, the crew dragon capsule’s return would become complicated, due to which the agency postponed the return journey till Tuesday.
Sunita Williams and Buch Willmore Mission Boeing Blow for Space Unit
The length of the long saga of “Buch and Suni” departing from the space station is the beginning of the much -awaited end, which was part of an important test mission with the Boeing Starlineer spacecraft. Initially the mission was expected to run eight days. Wilmore and Williams were the first crew to fly Starlineer in a test flight for capsules in June.