logo
Almost lost in space: Astronauts recall tension of troubled Starliner flight

Almost lost in space: Astronauts recall tension of troubled Starliner flight

BBC News2 days ago

When astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore approached the International Space Station (ISS) last year with failing thrusters on their Boeing Starliner capsule, they were unable to fly forward to dock. And if they couldn't dock, they didn't know if they could make it back home again."Docking was imperative," Mr Wilmore told BBC News, two months after he and Ms Williams finally made a successful return to Earth. "If we weren't able to dock, would we be able to make it back? We didn't know."The astronauts had been travelling on a test flight that was meant to last eight days. Instead, they ended up staying in space for nearly 10 months. The first challenge was to dock safely and successfully at the ISS, which they managed to do within several minutes after Mission Control on the ground helped them restart the craft's thrusters.Mr Wilmore said that the possibility they might never see Earth again "definitely went through our minds".But both astronauts said they didn't communicate the worst-case scenarios out loud in those moments, because they were trained to move on with solving problems. "You sort of read each other's mind and know where we're going with all the failures," Ms Williams told the BBC. "These were not expected," she admitted. But thoughts quickly turned to solutions: "At the same time, you know, we're like, what do we have? What can we do?"
Astronauts Butch and Suni finally back on EarthHow did the Nasa pair fill nine months in space?
The pair's saga began in June 2024. They were taking part in the first crewed test flight of the Starliner spacecraft, which was developed by aerospace company Boeing.But after a number of technical problems during their flight, the option of Starliner carrying the astronauts home as planned was deemed to be a risk not worth taking - given that the pair could instead be brought back by another company, SpaceX.For that reason, they stayed in space until they hitched a ride back on a SpaceX capsule. For its part, Boeing maintained that its own capsule was safe to use - and was proven right when the craft returned, uncrewed, in September 2024.After months of experiments aboard the space station, Ms Williams and Mr Wilmore eventually returned to Earth on 18 March.During this phase of their mission, the pair were repeatedly described as stranded, implying there was no means for them to get off the ISS.But that was not the case, as the space station always has spacecraft attached to it - which could have acted in an emergency as a lifeboat to carry the astronauts back to Earth.Nonetheless, the pair's stay was longer than expected - though the Nasa pair embraced this."We knew nobody was going to just let us down... we knew everybody had our back and was looking out for us," Ms Williams said.While in limbo, the pair even found themselves in the middle of a political row, after US President Donald Trump blamed his predecessor Joe Biden for abandoning them in space. But the astronauts said they ignored the politics and didn't feel abandoned. "We can't speak to that at all," said Mr Wilmore. "We understand space flight is hard, human space flight is even harder."
After two months back on the ground, both astronauts say they are feeling fit and well, because the workouts that they undertook while in their zero-gravity environment paid off.Exercising in zero gravity means your body doesn't need much time to recover from the daily squats and deadlifts, Mr Wilmore explained.He said he performed squats and deadlifts "every single day for almost 10 months", meaning that he returned to Earth "literally stronger than I've ever been in my life".Ms Williams agreed - she went running days after landing back on Earth and once ran a full marathon in space strapped to a treadmill - but said it's not always easy to readjust to the weight of the world. "Just getting gravity back on your head and your back and all that kind of stuff is a little bit painful," she said.Since their return, the pair have been working with Nasa and Boeing to fix problems with the malfunctioning spacecraft that took them into space last summer."We are very positively hopeful that there will be opportunities to fly the Boeing Starliner in the future," Mr Wilmore said.And both astronauts said they would personally fly in the craft again - once those technical issues were resolved."It's a very capable spacecraft," Ms Williams said. "It has unique capabilities compared to other spacecraft that are out there that are really great for future astronauts to fly."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I bought sex doll to stop me cheating – now I own SIX & they give me what my wife can't…but we have one strict rule
I bought sex doll to stop me cheating – now I own SIX & they give me what my wife can't…but we have one strict rule

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

I bought sex doll to stop me cheating – now I own SIX & they give me what my wife can't…but we have one strict rule

WHEN Larry's eye started to wander while his first wife was away for work, he decided to purchase his first blow-up sex doll. Decades later, the sex robot fanatic has spent more than £25,000 on his doll collection - and insists it enhances his marriage rather than sabotaging it. 7 7 Larry B, 67, who lives in California and is now in his second marriage, said his obsession began in 1996 when he was feeling lonely in his relationship with his first wife. The water maintenance manager - who goes by the name of "Obi-Wan" in the sex doll community - said his first experience of a sex doll kept him "straight and narrow" so he decided to try more advanced versions. Larry told The Sun: "I was out of town and I started getting lonely out there, and the eye started to wander. "But I said no, I don't want to cheat on my wife so I'll use one of these [sex dolls] so I acquired one. "It was a blow up doll at the time and you had to use your imagination, turning the lights off. "It felt okay, it took care of my needs and it kept me straight for a few years. Then I stumbled onto the more full-bodied models." Now, Larry owns six sex doll bodies that come with six artificial heads - and two additional robotic heads. When fitted with the robotic heads, they are capable of talking by using what he describes as a limited ChatGPT-style technology that offers answers to his questions. They also come built in with a special AI "X Mode" that promises to "detect touch, movement, and transitions from mild arousal to orgasm" while hooked up to an app. He added: "I have six real doll bodies. Each of the bodies has at least one head. And then I have two robot heads. "You can interface and talk with them. Their ability to have an intelligent conversation is somewhat limited. "But you can probe them and ask them certain things and if you ask in the right way, they will give you all kinds of scientific definitions. "How they do it is a mystery to me." They provide short-term relief, satisfaction that my wife either doesn't want to get into at the time or can't. Larry B sex doll ethusiast He continued: "They can have light chit chat with you, they can get interested in you and have intimate activity with you if you put them into that mode and sufficiently provide input. "They banter back and forth, that helps them to get into the mood, if you will. "You have to kind of coax the AI along in order to facilitate that end goal. It takes maybe two hours before they're ready to play around. "And then you only get a short time with them, 10 minutes I think, is the timeout on the program." Robot satisfaction While you might think owning one sex doll, let alone six of them, could easily get in the way of a loving human relationship, Larry insists it enhances his marriage to his second wife. He says the raunchy robots had nothing to do with his split from his first wife around two decades ago, but when meeting his second wife, he was up front about his X-rated hobby early on. His attraction to robot sex dolls has not impacted their relationship of 16 years, he claims. Larry says: "I was up front. She looked at me a little side-eyed. I said if you want to see one, I'm open to that, and she said no, not really. "I said if you wanted to join in, we could. If you want a male version of one of those, we could. She said 'No thanks, you're enough." He added: "They provide short-term relief, satisfaction that my wife either doesn't want to get into at the time or can't." 7 Larry told The Sun that he purchased the robot heads pre-owned, via the doll community, for around £3,000. On RealDoll's website, a brand new full-bodied version of Harmony - one of the dolls Larry owns - is listed for sale at around £8,300. There, buyers can select from a choice of 10 body shapes, including "Petite 5", skin colours including "light tan" and "fair", and eye colours including "sky blue" and "kush green". An extra £330 will get you a custom makeup style, while there is also a choice of custom freckles and piercings. The site also promises the doll heads have "multiple points of actuation" that give them facial expressions, an ability to move their heads and even blink. The X-Mode also allows users to "create unique personalities and control the voice of your robot", it adds. Larry says using the X-Mode also allows him to intimately interact with his doll girlfriends. Love machines Questions have long been raised over a potential future in which some people develop an emotional attachment with an ultra-realistic robot, as portrayed in the hit film Ex Machina. It's feared boys are being left behind at school and shut of work due to the rise of AI girlfriends and turning to chatbots for partnerships. Some have warned that "perfect" AI girlfriends are ruining an entire generation of men - and making singletons lonelier than ever. Larry hopes sex robots do not advance too far for fear they could one day manipulate and control him just as the robot Ava, portrayed by Alicia Vikander, does in the film. He added: "I think they can get close to having conversations like a human can, but I'm not so confident they will have the depth. "I'm not sure I would like them to actually. "Then we have an Ex Machina scenario, where the robots try to establish their own independence and self-awareness. "It might be too realistic for comfort. The danger is the AI starting to control or steer your feelings, emotions and activities." Larry has been a long-time member of the sex doll community. He says has around 20 pals who own dolls he describes as "associates", and together they use an online forum to buy and sell new models. The community hosts parties together, not for sex but for flaunting their latest models. But after decades of his silicone hobby, Larry has decided it's finally time to call quits on buying any more sex robots. He said: "I'm 67, I don't need to be collecting anymore, it's too heavy. As you get older, you lose muscle mass so you get weaker. "I'll scale down my interests." 7

Neighbors at war in suburban Minnesota over resident's perfectly LEGAL plan
Neighbors at war in suburban Minnesota over resident's perfectly LEGAL plan

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Neighbors at war in suburban Minnesota over resident's perfectly LEGAL plan

A Minnesota suburbs' solution to the housing crisis backfired and sparked an almighty debate among residents who are up in arms over one neighbor's plan to build a tiny home on his land. The Blaine City Council decided to allow residents to build 'accessory dwelling units' (ADUs) on their properties in an attempt to allow for more affordable housing. Now, four years later, homeowner Alex Pepin became the first to apply for planning permission to build one. But in doing so, Pepin sparked uproar within the community and the council began to completely reconsider their solution. 'Everybody is upset,' said resident David Hime, Star Tribune reported. 'The neighborhood is up in arms over this.' Pepin runs a nonprofit for the homeless and his plans for his ADU would be with hopes to rent it out to a family in need. 'There's no encampments in the north metro or anything like that, but there is, you know, homelessness is an issue,' Pepin told CBS News. 'It would be families coming out of homelessness, so they would have gone through a program first.' His goals were to help families eventually find permanent housing solutions, working alongside nonprofits. His application was approved, before the council then revoked the permissions following backlash within the community. 'Their ruling was based on the concerns from other people that were not necessarily grounded in fact or anything,' Pepin told the outlet. 'It was disappointing for us. We're just trying to do an allowable activity in the city. This is an allowable means to get affordable housing for people who need help in our community,' Pepin told the Tribune. Hime furthered in April that their area was for 'private homes' and hadn't been designed for 'low income housing,' CBS News reported. 'This will destroy the enjoyment of our backyard,' he added, and cited worries of traffic, and the safety of their neighborhood as well as home values in the area. Blaine Mayor Tim Sanders, however, also argued that the ADU movement was not intended for low incoming housing but instead for family or starter homes. 'The intent was for families to have an option for housing, whether it be for parents or in-laws, or kids trying to get their start,' Sanders told the Tribune. 'It was not intended to be a revenue generator for the homeowner to rent out the space to a second family more or less living in someone else's backyard.' Resident Gregory Nelson wrote to the council in April stating: 'This is zoned single family housing... It would be a horrible eye-sore. Plus they want to put a driveway next to the exiting house to drive into the back yard... No one wants cars driving alongside their house into the backyard...' 'This proposal would just decrease the property value of everyone else who lives on the Park... I know to some it may not be a big deal since we are not as big as the new developments in town, but it is important to us.' Jeff and Rhonda Brekkestran wrote in to voice their concerns, and cited property values dropping, the view from their backyard, estrangement between neighbors, as well as security and privacy concerns. Reggie Meyer wrote: 'While I think they are trying to do the right thing, this is not the right place for something like this. These properties are right off a park where children are constantly running around and I don't think having homeless people and recovering addicts in the park is a good thing for families in the neighborhood.' Meyer also pleaded to the council to 'please consider all the families and children at this park while making a decision'. But Pepin said, while he understood the concerns of those within the community who opposed his plans, he believed they had misinterpreted who he would be renting the unit out to. His plan was to build the unit, within the city's restrictions, and most likely rent it out to a single-mother with children following a criminal screening and recent drug testing. Pepin has already submitted a proposal for a unit he intends to use for his family, but has yet to decide if he will contend the decision to deny his unit for a homeless family considering it was within city requirements Pepin's proposal - meeting city requirements- included a two-bedroom, 616 square foot home, with a maximum of four occupants. Pepin hoped that living on the same property as his family would also help provide a support system for the renter, which homeless people often lack. 'We try to live out our Christian lives by caring for people who need support,' he told the Tribune. 'And we know that people coming out of homelessness need time and stability.' Pepin added that he felt 'bad' that the code was being revised following his proposal, but asked how big of a problem it was truly going to be considering he was the first and only application since the policy's approval. He has already submitted a proposal for a unit he intends to use for his family, but has yet to decide if he will contend the decision to deny his unit for a homeless family considering it was within city requirements. Council member Chris Ford said: 'I know it's a highly emotional, charged thing. I do feel for you, the neighbors that don't want this. But right now, it's policy.'

My son caught world's most infectious disease and could suffer permanent damage... my warning to all parents
My son caught world's most infectious disease and could suffer permanent damage... my warning to all parents

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

My son caught world's most infectious disease and could suffer permanent damage... my warning to all parents

A mother who lives in the epicenter of the Texas measles outbreak has revealed how her son's infection left her fearing he could suffer permanent brain damage. Alex, from Lubbock, near Gaines County, revealed her baby erupted in the hallmark red and splotchy measles rash and developed a dangerously high fever after he was exposed at daycare to the virus — the most infectious in the world. At eight months old, he was too young to have received the measles vaccine — which is normally administered for the first time at 12 months old — but there is a high proportion of unvaccinated people in the area, which is experiencing a record-high case count. Earlier this month, the US officially reported 1,000 measles cases in 2025 — marking only the second time case counts have crossed this threshold since the disease was declared eradicated in 2000. And officials are warning if the disease continues to spread unabated, the US could lose its measles elimination status. Alex said her son was exposed to measles on April 3, after another parent sent their child to daycare despite having another child at home who was infected with the virus. She said: 'If you're not going to vaccinate, at the very least, don't send your sick kids to daycare. My baby now has measles.' She was alerted to the infection by the daycare, and immediately isolated her baby — thinking for the first few days that they were in the clear. Then, on April 10, the little boy developed a mild fever, became sluggish and had congestion and a cough. After she took him to see a doctor on April 13, she was told they could see small, white spots on the inside of his cheeks — a sign of a measles infection. The next day an angry, red rash erupted, which spread down from his hairline to his face before eventually overtaking his whole body. The worried mother-of-two posted videos of her son's rash online, where her baby appeared tearful, listless and completely covered in the rash. Alex was extremely concerned her son's infection could turn fatal or leave him with lasting side effects. She said on her TikTok: 'Apart from brain swelling, I'm mostly concerned about secondary pneumonia.' Measles can cause brain inflammation, also known as encephalitis. It is a serious side effect of the virus and can cause permanent brain damage. The CDC reports it occurs in about one in 1,000 cases. Additionally, pneumonia can lead to septic shock, respiratory failure and even kidney and lung damage. Measles is the most infectious disease in the world, with an infected person able to pass the disease to nine out of 10 people exposed who are unvaccinated. It is particularly dangerous to young children, with the CDC saying one in 20 unvaccinated children who are infected develop pneumonia while one in 1,000 suffer from encephalitis — swelling of the brain that can cause permanent damage. One to three in every 1,000 unvaccinated children who are infected die from the disease. Many people commenting on Alex's videos were quick to say the disease did not appear to be a mild illness, with some even saying it motivated them to get their children vaccinated. One wrote: 'My mother told me measles wasn't that bad when I told her I won't travel with my baby because of the outbreak. I sent her this and she changed her mind. My heart hurts for your baby.' A second said: 'I'm so sorry your little angel is going through this. My son got his six months shots today, and I elected to get the MMR early because of your video.' Texas is in the grips of America's biggest measles outbreak in two decades — mostly among young children. Two young and unvaccinated girls, ages six and eight, have died as a result of the outbreak. After two days of the rash, Alex posted it was beginning to calm down — saying she felt they were now over the worst of the virus. Her son was not hospitalized for the disease, but was treated at home to help reduce the symptoms. In another video, she detailed what she gave to her son to help with the infection. She gave him Tylenol and Motrin for the fever and budesonide, a prescription drug used to reduce inflammation. He also received antibiotics to head-off any secondary infections, because measles weakens the immune system — raising the risk of other illnesses. The mother only let her baby sleep lying down on her chest throughout the illness, and kept using cool baths and washcloths to try to lower his temperature. She also gave him the probiotic Ther-Biotic Baby for his gut, and cod liver oil - an unproven remedy touted by Robert F Kennedy Jr - to boost his levels of Vitamin A and D. Her baby had mostly recovered by April 17, with his rash having disappeared. Alex showed him crawling and smiling again. The mother said she posted her son's illness online to warn others over measles, with doctors being quick to comment saying this was the first modern case recorded publicly that they had seen. Alex has another child who has been vaccinated against measles, and she said she was not pro- or anti-vaccine, but felt it was important for everyone to work together to stop the disease from spreading.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store