Boeing's Starliner is mysteriously blooping like a submarine in space | Mashable.
Boeing's Starliner is mysteriously blooping like a submarine in space
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NASA astronaut Barry "Butch" Wilmore, commander of Boeing Starliner's test flight, radioed flight controllers about a new spaceship mystery. Credit: NASA / Frank Micheaux |
Apparently, Boeing's troubled spaceship isn't done giving NASA some brain teasers while it's still in space.
Starliner's commander, astronaut Barry "Butch" Wilmore, asked Houston mission control on Saturday why the test capsule had started emitting strange noises from a speaker. At first the sounds weren't audible, then Wilmore, 61, captured a better recording: an unnerving, perpetual blooping, similar to the pulse of a submarine's sonar ping.
"I'll let y'all scratch your heads and see if you can figure out what's going on," Wilmore said in his Southern drawl over the radio.
Flight controllers didn't seem to immediately know the cause or source of the noise. Neither NASA nor Boeing, the spacecraft's developer, responded to questions from Mashable on Sunday regarding the sounds, and it was unclear whether the issue persisted. The only unusual thing Wilmore had observed at the time of the communication was the sound transmitted over the speaker. No other problems or weird configurations were happening within the capsule, he said.
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Though the U.S. space agency recently decided Wilmore and his crewmate, pilot Sunita "Suni" Williams, would not return on Starliner but a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule, Starliner remains docked at the International Space Station some 250 miles above Earth. It is expected to stay there until departing for a robotic landing without passengers no earlier than 6:04 p.m. ET Friday, Sept. 6.
If all goes as planned, Starliner will touch down at the Army's White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico about six hours later. A system of parachutes and air bags should cushion its drop over the desert shortly after midnight on Sept. 7.
The pulsing sounds are the latest in a series of quandaries related to Starliner, which launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in June for its first test flight carrying people. The issue was first reported by Ars Technica on Sunday, based on a posting of the International Space Station chatter in a NASASpaceflight.com forum. The authenticity of the recording, which can be found in the forum, has not been independently verified.
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Veteran astronauts Wilmore and Williams were in limbo this summer while NASA leadership and Boeing managers discussed whether Starliner was safe to bring them home. During their flight to the space station, Starliner experienced propulsion issues.
What should have been an eight-day stint in space for them will now stretch for eight months. Both will be incorporated as regular crew members of Expedition 71/72 through February 2025 and will return with the agency’s Crew-9 mission. In the fallout, two female astronauts who were originally assigned to Crew-9 — Zena Cardman and Stephanie Wilson — lost their ride to space to free up a pair of seats for Wilmore and Williams to come home.
"I'll let y'all scratch your heads and see if you can figure out what's going on."
Getting Starliner through its testing phase has been a relentless battle for Boeing, though its representatives have not always been forthcoming on why the program has suffered so many setbacks. A string of issues has spanned a decade.
After the Space Shuttle retired in 2011, NASA hitched all of its rides on Russian rockets to the space station, costing the United States tens of millions of dollars per ride. Some considered it a national embarrassment.
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NASA hired Boeing and SpaceX to build commercial spaceships to carry astronauts to and from the station in 2014. While SpaceX's capsule went into service four years ago, Boeing's Starliner has yet to obtain certification for regular flight operations.
NASA never intended to have all its eggs in Elon Musk's basket and says Starliner is still crucial to have as a backup. Ken Bowersox, associate administrator for space operations, hinted that the agency expects Starliner to fly again.
"We’ve learned a lot about the spacecraft during its journey to the station and its docked operations," he said in a statement. "We also will continue to gather more data about Starliner during the uncrewed return and improve the system for future flights to the space station."
Topics NASA
Boeing symbolizes the decline of the USA.
ReplyDeleteNo. Seriously 🙈🙈
ReplyDeleteBoeing needs a much better hiring process.
ReplyDeleteBoeing outsourced most everything.
DeleteMeantime china already building an observatory on the dark side of the moon. 🤣🤫
ReplyDeletesure 🤣👌🏻
DeleteDefinitely not an encouraging transport back to earth!
ReplyDeleteIt’s losing helium
ReplyDeleteMaybe put some billioners in there.
ReplyDeleteFirst preparation for his use as a submarine?
ReplyDeleteBoeing needs to step down and let someone who knows what they’re doing handle this!
ReplyDeleteSo then, after Polaris Dawn has fully tested the new space suits, will NASA finally adopt a universal standard for the astronauts and have them be compatible with all future space missions?
ReplyDeleteAlso, if there was a major issue on the ISS, the astronauts would have little to no time to make it to the escape capsules. They'd be coming back to earth with literally the clothes on their backs. Not buying the Boeing story of their suits not being compatible with Dragon.
Boeing doesn't need to make their space suits compatible. They'll be out of the Space business. The ones these astronauts wore will be in a museum some day.
DeleteThere is a submarine in space.
ReplyDeleteThe next alien movie hopefully and with more action
ReplyDeleteHello astronaut Barry; I've been trying to reach you about your car's warranty.
ReplyDeleteThe Starliner is the gift that keeps on giving and not in a good way. It's time for SpaceX to get a court order forcing NASA to suspend the program permanently.
ReplyDeleteMice?
ReplyDeleteProlly VP candidate Walz returning from Afghanistan
ReplyDeleteSpace Aliens? Or just China!
ReplyDeleteBoeing does not have a lot of expertise in building spacecraft and should never have received the contract in the first place.
ReplyDeleteET tryin to phone home
ReplyDeletethis is beyond an attempt at being funny. This is now to the danger stage. We need to get these 2 home.
Deleteto NASA:
ReplyDeleteSome rotating or reciprocating machinery that operates (super-slow speed) at a relatively low rep rate.
Find the pulse rate for clues (rpm), relate in to speed.
Start turning things off and on
Suspect ventilation system (airborne noise but do not feel it in structure), change speeds of fans.
May be picking up air pressure wave striking against the mike.
4, Talk to Navy submarine platform/structure-borne noise monitoring people for ideas.
Retired Navy physicist
Odd that it should appear only recently?
Deletehammer
DeleteInteresting. It sounded like heavy reverb was added to the ping.
ReplyDeleteIt seems like I remember another astronaut complaining about the same thing on another mission many years ago?
ReplyDeleteMaybe the Starliner is "haunted".
ReplyDeleteGremlins. Its gotta be Gremlins.
ReplyDeleteBoeing can’t seem to get anything right these days.
ReplyDeleteThey're trying make it sound like some like some alien invasion thing. In reality, it should be obvious that Russia or China was trying to hack it (and was probably successful). My bet is that it was China.
ReplyDeleteIt's that "bOeing, bOeing" sound again that's driving the two nuts.
ReplyDelete"They're here!"
ReplyDeleteDidn't they hear sonar like sounds in that movie from the 80's?
ReplyDeleteIf they were having thruster issues , maybe its a leak.
ReplyDeleteIt's coming! Get Sigourney up there stat!!
ReplyDeleteBoring has become a laughing stock, endless talking material for comedians
ReplyDeleteSomeone with Sleep Apnea snoring?
ReplyDeleteSerious mouth breather.
DeleteSo the Supreme Court agree that a president can dispo of a deranged president of another nation and is immune?
ReplyDeletewho took the picture ?
ReplyDeleteNASA
DeleteHard to feel sympathetic.
ReplyDeletespace junk
ReplyDeleteDid it start in the middle of the night? Must’ve been a smoke detector.
ReplyDeleteIt's wet in the ISS swimming pool
ReplyDeleteThey will miss out on voting in November…
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy what you share on Facebook but I have tried to send you a friend request but it's not going through. Do you mind trying from your end? I will be happy to be one of your friends here since there’s no end to making friends. But if you find this message embarrassing please pardon my manners.🙏
DeleteSome say space is water.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy what you share on Facebook but I have tried to send you a friend request but it's not going through. Do you mind trying from your end? I will be happy to be one of your friends here since there’s no end to making friends. But if you find this message embarrassing please pardon my manners.🙏
Deletenormal.there is water up there.
ReplyDeleteCommunication equipment was making feedback noises. My computer speakers make noises also if I turn the light switch on and off the in the room, power feedback... problem solved!
ReplyDeleteNow what? We start writing the screenplay
ReplyDeleteBoeing Boeing Boeing... 😂😂😂😂
ReplyDeleteBeing controlled by Vyger
ReplyDeleteWhat’s new?
ReplyDeleteThey could have used Hollywood instead
ReplyDelete😱
ReplyDeleteTopic change...it's just a bluetooth speaker that cannot connect to the device with garbled message. The engineers forgot to place it within the 10meter range. Nothing to worry.
ReplyDeleteRun Silent, Run Deep
ReplyDeleteCheck the hatch connectors.
ReplyDeleteIt wants to be in Star Trek
ReplyDeleteAliens are taking it over.
ReplyDeleteMy take away is that, apparently, submarines “bloop”.
ReplyDeleteBoeing has become a joke. NASA has become a joke. They should cut that POS loose and let it burn up without astronauts on it. How in the world has this country been reduced to a point that we cant get people off the space station. SpaceX will bring them home. Then let that old POS also burn up. What a sad waste.
ReplyDeleteSpace-X to the rescue lol
ReplyDeleteIt's a sad year for Boeing.
ReplyDeleteyears
Deletehttps://media1.tenor.co/m/ebjGGkixQJ8AAAAC/hal9000.gif?t=AAYhLiYzG0kA3iX0ZilZxA&c=VjFfZmFjZWJvb2s&fbclid=IwY2xjawFD_BZleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHd-hYcpSLolaR6HS0wp_ZjtlQzdmGLaGwmoGwSoQwV0PTBBkQ6rD7YX9Sg_aem_8RCCw5RMKA8aLzavpzN-Tw
ReplyDeleteHAL
DeleteCuz they're in a swimming pool
ReplyDeleteThat thing is becoming sentient.
ReplyDeleteThis has already been solved within 24 hours. It's just feedback between the ISS and Starliners audio configuration setup. It happens all the time because of all the different types of equipment they have up there
ReplyDeleteSo what happens if Starliner blows up in the robotics re-entry 🤣🤣🤣
ReplyDeleteGetting ready to implode like a submarine....
ReplyDelete