Boeing Starliner Completes First Orbital Flight Test with Successful Landing
- Starliner touches down safely in Western U.S. two days after post-launch anomaly
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WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE,
N.M., Dec. 22, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- The Boeing [NYSE: BA] CST-100 Starliner's first
mission ended historically today when it became the first American orbital space
capsule to land on American soil rather than in an ocean.
The spacecraft's crew module landed at
the U.S. Army's White Sands Missile Range at 5:48 a.m. Mountain
time, after spending just over two days on orbit and checking off a
number of flight test objectives. The last time a spacecraft landed at the
historic White Sands Space Harbor runway was in 1982, when Space Shuttle
Columbia touched down, ending its STS-3 mission.
Shortly after its December
20 launch and separation from its booster rocket, Starliner experienced a
mission timing anomaly that made it use too much fuel to reach the intended
destination of the International Space Station. Flight controllers were able to
address the issue and put Starliner into a lower, stable orbit. The vehicle
demonstrated key systems and capabilities before being signaled to return to
Earth.
"The Starliner team's quick recovery and
ability to achieve many mission objectives – including safe deorbit, re-entry
and landing – is a testament to the people of Boeing who have dedicated years of
their lives working toward the achievement of commercial human spaceflight,"
said John Mulholland, vice president and program manager of
Boeing's Commercial Crew Program. "Their professionalism and collaboration with
our NASA customer in challenging conditions allowed us to make the most of this
mission."
The Starliner landing demonstrated the
robustness of its landing systems, including its innovative parachutes and
airbags.
Although this Starliner carried no
people, it did have a passenger. An anthropometric test device, named "Rosie,"
was in the commander's seat for the entire mission. She was outfitted with about
a dozen sensors that collected data to help prove Starliner is safe for future
human crews.
Next, this crew module will be returned
to Florida for data retrieval, analysis and refurbishment for
future missions. It is the vehicle chosen to fly NASA astronauts Sunita "Suni"
Williams and Josh Cassada, along with two international partner
astronauts, on the first operational mission. In parallel, Boeing's Starliner
team is finalizing the vehicle that will fly Boeing astronaut Chris
Ferguson and NASA astronauts Mike Fincke and Nicole
Mann on the Crewed Flight Test.
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