Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (2024)

By Denise Chow

What to know about Boeing's Starliner test flight

  • Boeing will try for a third time to launch two NASA astronauts to the International Space Station on the company's Starliner capsule.
  • Liftoff is scheduled for 10:52 a.m. ET from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
  • It will be the Starliner's first crewed flight — a crucial demonstration for Boeing. If successful, NASA could authorize the Starliner capsule to begin making regular trips to the space station.
  • Onboard will be NASA astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita Williams.

What to expect

Denise Chow

As the countdown clock ticks closer to liftoff, here’s what to expect.

The astronauts are now strapped into their seats, and the Starliner capsule’s hatch is closed. A series of leak checks will be performed, then the "crew access arm" — the suspended walkway used to access the capsule — will retract away from the spacecraft.

Next, various teams of mission controllers will conduct a “go-no go” poll to confirm that all systems are ready for liftoff. Then, it’s all up to the Atlas V rocket to light and take the Starliner capsule and its crew to space.

After launch, there will be a number of key milestones to keep an eye on. Around 15 minutes after liftoff, the Starliner capsule will separate from the upper stage of the rocket. Roughly 16 minutes after that, the spacecraft will conduct a burn to help it reach a stable orbit.

Next, Wilmore and Williams will spend around 24 hours journeying to the International Space Station. Docking with the orbiting outpost is expected on Thursday at 12:15 p.m. ET.

What's inside the Starliner capsule

Denise Chow

This mission is a test flight but the Starliner capsule is packed with nearly 800 pounds of cargo to take to the International Space Station.

Most importantly, the spacecraft is carrying a new pump for the space station's Urine Processor Assembly, which filters and recycles urine and other wastewater, turning it into safe drinking water.

The capsule is also loaded with mission patches, pins, American flags, collectible coins and a hard drive loaded with thousands of pieces of artwork made by children from around the world. The astronauts have packed along some personal items for family and friends, and some other surprise items will be revealed during the mission, according to NASA.

The press assembles

Juliette Arcodia

Reporting from Cape Canaveral, Florida

Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (3)

We’re setting up here at the NBC News building and the parking lot is getting more full with members of the media.

About two hours before launch, there were already about 15 tripods set up for live shots down by the countdown clock, and members of the Kennedy Space Center media team and members of the press were making preparations.

Closing the hatch

Denise Chow

Personnel are now closing the hatch of the Starliner capsule.

“See you in a couple weeks,” one team member radioed to the astronauts in the spacecraft.

Next, the capsule will be pressurized to check for any leaks.

Aerial views of the rocket

NBC News

All eyes are on the launch pad as preparations continue for a scheduled 10:52 a.m. ET liftoff.

From the oceans to the cosmos

Denise Chow

The astronauts are bringing a small, sequined narwhal toy with them to space. The toy was chosen to be their “zero-gravity indicator,” which serves as a visual indicator that the Starliner capsule has reached the weightlessness of microgravity.

Look for the narwhal to be floating around the spacecraft (on a tether!) when the crew reaches orbit.

Getting buckled in

Denise Chow

Astronauts Butch Williams and Sunita Williams are getting strapped into their seats inside the Starliner capsule. Another round of spacesuit leak checks will be performed, and teams will make sure the crew members can reach all of their controls and communicate with mission managers on the ground.

The Starliner craft is relatively roomy, as far as space capsules go. The interior is roughly equivalent to a midsize SUV, according to NASA.

Weather looks good for launch

Denise Chow

Weather conditions are 90% favorable for liftoff this morning.

Teams are monitoring the possibility of cumulus clouds forming around the launch pad closer to launch time, but NASA officials said the threat is currently low. It’s dangerous to launch through puffy cumulus clouds because that can trigger a lightning strike, which would endanger the astronauts onboard.

Beyond Florida, mission managers also need to keep an eye on weather conditions all along the rocket’s ascent corridor up the Eastern Seaboard. This is because there are points along that path where, if something were to go wrong, the Starliner capsule could abort and separate off the top of the rocket before splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean.

A family affair

Marissa Parra

Reporting from Cape Canaveral, Florida

In an interview hours before Saturday’s launch attempt was called off, Sunita Williams’ mother, Bonnie Pandya, told NBC News that her daughter was in good spirits.

“She’s very upbeat. She’s so happy about going,” Pandya said. “She loves it.”

Pandya said she expects her own emotions will run high when her daughter finally lifts off.

“When it goes, I’ll get very emotional,” Pandya said. “She’s my beautiful little girl — the baby of the family.”

Rock, paper, scissors...

Denise Chow

Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (10)

Before heading to the launch pad, Wilmore and Williams are playing a game of "rock, paper, scissors" with Joe Acaba, chief of the Astronaut Office. This is a new take on an old tradition of playing a game of cards before launch, dating back to the space shuttle era.

The goal is to lose the games before heading to the launch pad. Why? Because the astronauts are effectively leaving their bad luck behind on Earth before lifting off.

Rocket is fueled and ready to go

Denise Chow

NASA officials say that the Atlas V rocket is now fully fueled at the launch pad.

Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are finishing up leak checks on their spacesuits before they head to the launch site.

Fellow astronaut Michael Fincke, who trained with Wilmore and Williams as the mission’s backup pilot and is conducting live commentary for this morning’s launch, said the crew members are ready to fly.

“We’ve been waiting for over five years to get Starliner launched, but they are very, very excited about today,” Fincke said. “You can see that they’re focused on getting the job done and they are very ready for this mission, and they wish all of us a great experience in joining them on this great journey.”

Medical checks cleared

Jason Abbruzzese

Boeing said early this morning that the astronauts have cleared medical checks.

Meet the astronaut crew

Denise Chow

NASA astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita Williams are set to make history as the first crew members to fly aboard the Starliner capsule.

Wilmore and Williams are both veteran astronauts and former test pilots in the U.S. Navy. NASA selected the pair in 2022 for Boeing’s first crewed test flight.

Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (14)

Wilmore, the mission’s commander, has completed two previous spaceflights, logging 178 days in space. A Tennessee native, he piloted the space shuttle Atlantis to the space station in 2009, and also launched to the orbiting outpost aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft in 2014 as a member of the space station’s Expedition 41 crew.

Williams, the mission’s pilot, previously completed two stints aboard the International Space Station, totaling 322 days in space. She grew up in Needham, Massachusetts, and first flew to the space station on the space shuttle Discovery and remained there for about six months.

In 2012, Williams returned to space, this time in a Russian-built Soyuz spacecraft. Her second stay on the space station lasted roughly four months.

Why this flight is important

Denise Chow

The Starliner’s crewed test flight is required for Boeing to show that its spacecraft can safely carry astronauts to and from the International Space Station.

Rival company SpaceX has been conducting routine flights to the space station with its Crew Dragon capsule since 2020. Boeing is hoping that a successful test flight will help it catch up to SpaceX and will provide NASA with a long-awaited second option.

Boeing’s Starliner and SpaceX’s Crew Dragon were both developed as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, which was launched more than a decade ago to support the creation of new, privately built space vehicles to fill the void left when the agency retired its space shuttles.

Third time's a charm?

Denise Chow

It’s launch day for Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft!

This will be the third attempt to launch the capsule on its first flight with a crew onboard, following repeated delays, so the event should be closely watched.

Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (17)

The Starliner completed an uncrewed test flight to the International Space Station in 2022, paving the way for it to carry astronauts. But its first try at a crewed launch, on May 6, was scrubbed with about two hours remaining in the countdown due to an issue with a valve on the rocket. A helium leak was later found in the capsule’s propulsion system, which led to further delays.

Then on Saturday, a second launch attempt wascalled offwith less thanfourminutes to go before liftoff, after an automatic abort was triggered by one of the computers that controls the Atlas V rocket on which the Starliner rides to space. The rocket is manufactured by United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

Those setbacks followed years of delays and budget overruns in Boeing's Starliner program, so the stakes are high today.

Denise Chow

Denise Chow is a reporter for NBC News Science focused on general science and climate change.

Live updates: Boeing will try again to launch two NASA astronauts to space (2024)
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