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Spacesuits of Boeing-launched astronauts stranded on space station are incompatible with SpaceX craft

The two astronauts stranded on the International Space Station after a malfunction in their Boeing spacecraft may remain there much longer than expected because of an incompatibility with their spacesuits.

NASA told Fox News Digital that while Boeing’s suits are made to work on its spacecraft, SpaceX’s suits are made to work on its Dragon spacecraft, which NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will likely be aboard on their return to Earth.

The two astronauts were scheduled to arrive aboard the Starliner on June 5 and only stay until mid-month.

Officials are discussing how to bring them home safely after helium leaks and propulsion problems were discovered.

Russ DeLoach, NASA’s safety and mission assurance manager, said both astronauts are “very familiar” with the International Space Station, and the Starliner test flight marked each of their third missions to the ISS.

The commercialization of space means NASA is no longer as heavily involved in every aspect of missions and spacecraft design as it once was.

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are stranded on the International Space Station. AP

As a result, incompatibility with the spacesuits designed by SpaceX and Boeing reportedly caused problems for Wilmore and Williams’ return to Earth.

“The Boeing suit is made to work on the Starliner spacecraft, and the SpaceX suit is made to work on the Dragon spacecraft,” NASA told Fox News Digital. “Both were designed to fit their respective spacecraft.”

NASA has not confirmed whether the issue will affect the astronauts’ return.

NASA’s Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were scheduled to spend just eight days in space. AFP via Getty Images
The stranded astronauts may end up staying on the ISS for a long time due to incompatibility with their spacesuits. NASA/YouTube

Fox News Digital also reached out to Boeing about the matter.

On Saturday, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson and other NASA leaders will hold an internal flight readiness review of the Boeing crewed test. During the review, NASA said it would “raise and reconcile any formal objections.”

Following the test, NASA will hold a live press conference from the Johnson Space Center in Houston at 1 p.m.

A decision to return the Starliner spacecraft to Earth with the astronauts is expected to be made as early as Saturday.

Suni Williams (seated left) and Butch Wilmore (seated right) pose with the ISS crew after docking on June 6, 2024. NASA/AFP via Getty Images

If the decision is made to return Starliner to Earth uncrewed, Wilmore and Williams would remain on the space station until late February 2025, according to NASA’s website.

NASA will then send just two crew members instead of four to the space station in September on SpaceX’s Crew 9 mission, with Wilmore and Williams planning to return to Earth with the other two crew members early next year.

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