- Space X’s Dragon spacecraft sank at the International Space Station on Sunday.
- Its arrival paved the way for the trapped astronauts to return home to Bit Vilmor and Sunni Williams.
- The couple has been trapped on ISS for more than nine months.
SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft successfully did not do the International Space Station on Sunday, which cleared the way back home for more than nine months for Vilmor and Sunny Williams, trapped by US astronauts.
The staff’s 10 missions arrived at ISS about 29 hours after launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday evening, in which NASA’s astronaut Ann McK Klein and Nicole Aires, Japan Aerospace Explororation Agency, took astronauts Takaua Anexy, and Russian Cosmont Carl Peskov.
In a direct series of his arrival, there were pleasant scenes when he entered the ISS and embraced the campaign of 72 staff – including Vilmor and Williams.
SPSX staff members are 10 members and members of the Expedition 72 staff are riding in ISS. Nasa
The mission of Vilmor and Williams, which has been going on for only eight days, has seen them trapped on ISS since June 2024.
NASA and Boeing identified the helium leak and problems with the star liner spacecraft, which approached the space station as soon as the pair was taken to the ISS, causing the agency to return to minimize the risk and collect data.
Boeing’s star liner spacecraft returned to Earth safely in September, touching New Mexico’s White Sands Space Harbor.
According to NASA, Vilmor and Williams have spent their expansion time on ISS Support Station Research, Maintenance, and Star Liner System testing and data analysis.
The agency said the couple would return to the ground before Wednesday, March 19, compared to March 19, after a period of handing over 10 members of the staff.
The US astronaut Nick Hague and Russian Cosmont Alexander Gorbonov will also join him in September.
The staff is ready to spend about 10 astronauts on the ISS after the next six months, which can be done scientific research and examination to help humans develop space for future missions.