NASA’s Crew-10 mission is the return of Bush Wilmor and Sony Williams, which is long awaited after holding it for nine months at the International Space Station.
SPACEX dragon capsule transferred four astronauts to the International Space Station as part of the NASA staff, which paves the way for a return NASA astronauts They were cut off for nine months.
The Dragon Crew Dragon Crew-10 Crew-10 capsule was awarded at 12:04 am (04:04 GMT on Sunday about 29 hours after its launch from the Kennedy Space Center in NASA in Florida.
They were welcomed by the seven-member station crew, which includes Bot Willmore and Sony Williams-veteran NASA astronauts and retired marine tested pilots who have been in the station since June.
The Boeing Starlener’s spacecraft, which they were experiencing on the journey of the crew before marriage, suffered from payment cases and considered inappropriate to return them to the ground. Their long stay was much longer than the ISS standard of space pioneers for about six months.
But it is much shorter than the 371 -day American spacecraft set by NASA’s astronaut Frank Rubio aboard ISS in 2023, or the world record kept by Russian astronaut Valerie Polakov, who spent 437 days on the space station Mir.
Other than that, the long-awaited Crew-10 trip is from the crew, a long-awaited first step for Willmore and Williams to the ground-part of a plan that NASA has put last year that President Donald Trump gave the need for more urgency since he took office in January.
Wilmore and Williams ISS will leave on Wednesday early at four in the morning of the United States (08:00 GMT), along with NASA astronaut Nick The Hague and Russian astronaut Alexander Gorbonov.
The Hague and Jorbonov flew to the International Space Station in September on a vehicle dragon crew with two empty seats Lilmore and Williams, and this craft has been linked to the station since then.
The crew includes 10, which is scheduled to stay at the station for about six months, NASA astronauts, Nicole Aires, the Japanese astronaut Takoya Ounishi and Russian astronaut Kirill Peskov.
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