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NASA Explains “Unusual Noises” In Sunita Williams’ Starliner Spacecraft


NASA Explains “Unusual Noises” In Sunita Williams’ Starliner Spacecraft

The spacecraft is at present docked on the ISS and scheduled to return on September 7.

New Delhi:

NASA has responded to studies claiming “unusual noises” being heard by astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore aboard the Worldwide House Station (ISS). The problem was first famous when Mr Wilmore reported listening to pulsating sounds via the audio system of Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft. 

The spacecraft is at present docked on the ISS and scheduled to return on September 7. NASA has since clarified that the sounds have been the results of an audio configuration challenge between the area station and Starliner.

In a press release, NASA defined that the ISS audio system is a posh community designed to interconnect a number of spacecraft and modules, making occasional noise and suggestions not unusual. The company reassured that the suggestions reported had no technical influence on the crew, the Starliner spacecraft, or station operations. 

“A pulsing sound from a speaker in Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft heard by NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore aboard the Worldwide House Station has stopped. The suggestions from the speaker was the results of an audio configuration between the area station and Starliner. The area station audio system is complicated, permitting a number of spacecraft and modules to be interconnected, and it is not uncommon to expertise noise and suggestions,” NASA mentioned in a press release. 

“The crew is requested to contact mission management after they hear sounds originating within the comm system. The speaker suggestions Wilmore reported has no technical influence to the crew, Starliner, or station operations, together with Starliner’s uncrewed undocking from the station no sooner than Friday, September 6,” the assertion learn.

Following its undocking, the Starliner will carry out an autonomous touchdown at White Sands House Harbor in New Mexico, roughly six hours after departure. Astronauts Wilmore and Williams, who arrived on the ISS on June 5 as a part of Boeing’s Crew Flight Check mission, will return to Earth in a SpaceX Dragon capsule in February 2025.
 



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