After staying on the International Space Station, which has been unexpectedly spanned to nine and a half months, NASA Sony Williams has returned to doing something on Earth’s face.
“I already went out and ran three miles yesterday,” said Ms. Williams, who returned to the ground two weeks ago, on Monday during a press conference at the NASA Space Center Johnson in Houston. “So I will give myself a little bit on his back.”
Mrs. Williams and her fellow astronaut Poach Wesmar repeatedly expressed her gratitude. During Mrs. Williams, she thanked the astronauts who participated in the Dragon Crew Crew Crew capsule that gives them a trip to Earth. I thanked NASA. Thank you Spacex. She thanked Boeing. She thanked the medical team who helped them get used to gravity again.
These words of gratitude may be appreciated by people at the Space Agency who – like many federal workers – are not sure of their mission, direction, or even their continuous employment since President Trump’s inauguration.
Mrs. Williams and Mr. Wilmor traveled to Al -Madar in June last year on a Boeing Starlener spacecraft test trip to what was meant by a short story at the International Space Station. But due to the problems of the Starliner payment system, NASA decided that Starliner returns to the ground empty and that Mrs. Williams and Mr. Wilmor will remain in the orbit until February.
They returned to the ground, returning to NASA, going through a transitional stage, although the path he would be known is unknown.
Elon Musk and the Ministry of Governmental efficiency aim to demolish the areas of federal bureaucracy. At the same time, Mr. Musk, the CEO of Spacex, also dreams of sending colonists to Mars, which promotes speculation that the current Artemis program – the Artemis program, which focuses on returning astronauts to the moon – can turn into Mr. Musk’s preferences and that other parts of the agency that work to change climate, can be curious astronomical sciences.
In January, Ms. Williams and Mr. Willmore turned into political soccer balls, as Mr. Trump and Mr. Musk said, without providing details or evidence, that the Biden administration had abandoned them in space in order to deprive good propaganda in the past fall of Mr. Musk, a supporter of Mr. Trump during the presidential campaign.
The astronauts have long maintained in general statements that they had not felt a fullness and were not abandoned for political reasons.
During the press conference at the Johnson Space Center, Mrs. Williams, Mr. Wilmor and Nick The Hague, the leader of the SPACEX crew mission that brought them home, all threw political witnesses and instead highlighted the cooperation and unity of the goal necessary for the astronaut.
“Then you present this with a nation that gathers, and it cares about the human facefield program and prays for us and what is happening.”
Mr. Lazay said that many of what happened on the ground remained below.
“When we are there in space, you do not feel politics,” he said. “You don’t feel any of it. It is strictly focused on the mission.”
He pointed out that Mrs. Williams worked as a leader of the satellite station for about six months.
“We can focus on something positive that it brings people together,” said Mr. Lazay, the magic of human space light.
Mr. Willmur, who served as the leader of the Starlener mission, will not blame Boeing for problems with the Starlener capsule that led to its extended stay. He said: “I do not like this term.”
He said that Boeing and NASA were sharing the responsibility unless he succeeded properly.
“I will start and face the finger, and ask me,” said Mr. Willmur. “I could have asked some questions, and the answers to these questions had turned into a tide.”
NASA officials said the next trip from Starliner had occurred late this year or some time next year. When they were asked if they were ready to ride such, Mrs. Williams and Mr. Williams said yes, without hesitation.
“Because we will correct all the issues we faced,” said Mr. Willmore. “We will fix them. We will make it work. Boeing is completely committed. NASA is completely committed to what they are doing. However, I get the heartbeat.”
“I agree,” said Ms. Williams. “The spacecraft is really capable.”
The International Space Station is currently scheduled to operate until 2030, when a SpaceX spacecraft is pushing the station from orbit to the Pacific Ocean. Recently, Mr. Musk suggested that the space station has lived its benefit and should be thrown soon, within two years. But astronauts talked wonderfully about their research there.
Mr. The Hague said that the complexity of experiments has increased significantly compared to what he achieved during a precedent in orbit six years ago.
“It gives you this feeling that we are in the golden age of the space station now in terms of investment.”