Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft is making a strange noise | Tech Reader

Date:

Share:



Things have been difficult for the Starliner. Now they’ve become just plain weird.

The spacecraft is making a strange noise and no one knows why.

NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore contacted Mission Control at the Johnson Space Center in Houston on Saturday to notify the team of the issue, Ars Technica reported.

“I’ve got a question about Starliner,” Wilmore said in the exchange with a Mission Control official. “There’s a strange noise coming through the speaker … I don’t know what’s making it.”

Wilmore then put the microphone to the speaker inside the Starliner so that Mission Control could take a recording of the sound. After hearing it, the official described it as “kind of like a pulsing noise, almost like a sonar ping.”

Wilmore said he couldn’t be sure if the weird noise had something to do with the connection between the station and the spacecraft, or if something else was causing it. NASA will now be examining the sound more closely to see if it can work out why it’s happening.

Commenting on the situation, retired Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield said: “There are several noises I’d prefer not to hear inside my spaceship, including this one that Boeing Starliner is now making.”

The mysterious sound may well be nothing to worry about, but NASA will no doubt be keen to try to pinpoint why it’s happening.

The incident come just days before NASA is planning to bring home the Starliner without the crew that traveled on it to the space station.

The Boeing-made spacecraft arrived at the station with Wilmore and Suni Williams in early June in the vehicle’s first-ever crewed flight.

But the Starliner had trouble with some of its thrusters as it approached the ISS, and a number of helium leaks were also discovered.

The issues prompted NASA to extend the mission while it investigated whether the vehicle was safe enough to bring home Wilmore and Williams. Last week, the agency finally decided that, out of an abundance of caution, it would fly the Starliner home empty, with Wilmore and Williams returning to Earth on a SpaceX spacecraft in February next year.










Source link

━ more like this

A new iPhone hacking tool puts some iOS 18 users at risk

Google and cybersecurity companies Lookout and iVerify have detailed a new hacking technique that potentially puts a significant portion of iPhone users in...

AI is reviving Val Kilmer in the upcoming film “As Deep as the Grave”

The use of generative AI in Hollywood has already sparked conversation around creativity and legacy. Now, an indie movie, As Deep as the...

FTSE plummets by more than 300 points as investors react ‘to the Middle East conflict intensifying’ – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

The FTSE 100 has experienced a significant decline, dropping nearly 300 points after the Bank of England decided to maintain interest rates at...

UK and allies condemn Iran’s attacks and will ‘appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Sir Keir Starmer has joined the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Japan in issuing a joint statement that condemns the...

Alexa+ launches in the UK

Amazon’s next-generation smart assistant has entered its Early Access program in the UK, marking Alexa+’s European debut following rollouts in the US, Canada...
spot_img