'Stranded' NASA Astronauts Return to Earth on SpaceX Dragon

XXL

Banned

Williams and Wilmore rode to the station on a crewed Boeing Starliner test mission in June. The crew capsule encountered technical issues and was sent back to Earth without the astronauts. Their eight-day stay became a months-long stay. The pair hitched a ride back on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. The capsule made a picture-perfect splashdown off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida on Tuesday afternoon.
Elon Musk Smoking GIF

 
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Being without gravity for a few months and then returning to earth hurts a lot. Its like suddenly having a ton of bricks falling on you. For a few days your extremities swell up with awful pain and you are bed ridden for a few days to a week depending how long youve been up there.
 
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What a place to get stuck....space.

Glad they made it back, and America has the coolest privatized space race in the world.
 
So Musk solved it fast while NASA couldnt do it in 8 months.

Thats gov for ya.
You can read some more about it here, if you're interested, including how the vessel that actually brought them back launched last September.

https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/...n-when-basic-spaceflight-truths-are-shredded/

edit: a quote for the click-stubborn.

The reality is that NASA set a plan for the return of Wilmore and Williams last August. The spacecraft that brought them back to Earth on Tuesday safely docked to the space station in September. They could have come home at any time since. NASA—not the Biden administration, which all of my reporting indicates was not involved in any decision-making—decided the best and safest option was to keep Wilmore and Williams in orbit until early this year. Musk knew this plan. He had to sign off on it. Senior NASA officials earlier this month confirmed, publicly and on the record, that the decision was made by the space agency in the best interests of the International Space Station Program.
 
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As we just aren't built for space, especially for long periods of time - I'm curious what this does to the body and whether they'll be exactly as they were before going up.
 
You can read some more about it here, if you're interested, including how the vessel that actually brought them back launched last September.

https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/...n-when-basic-spaceflight-truths-are-shredded/

edit: a quote for the click-stubborn.

The reality is that NASA set a plan for the return of Wilmore and Williams last August. The spacecraft that brought them back to Earth on Tuesday safely docked to the space station in September. They could have come home at any time since. NASA—not the Biden administration, which all of my reporting indicates was not involved in any decision-making—decided the best and safest option was to keep Wilmore and Williams in orbit until early this year. Musk knew this plan. He had to sign off on it. Senior NASA officials earlier this month confirmed, publicly and on the record, that the decision was made by the space agency in the best interests of the International Space Station Program.

are you saying Musk lied about the Biden administration didn't want to use SpaceX and hand the Trump administration a win thus keeping them in space as a deliberate act of political sabotage? but but Elon told Joe Rogan that's what "ackshullay" happened? say it isnt so
 
As we just aren't built for space, especially for long periods of time - I'm curious what this does to the body and whether they'll be exactly as they were before going up.
That's why long term space exploration and colonising Mars is completely off the table unless we either do extensive genetic modification or invent advanced gravity control (maybe possible via centrifugal rotation) and radiation shielding. The long term impact of low/no gravity and the elevated radiation will play merry hell with human health. Pregnancy in such situations also has likely severe complications.
 
You can read some more about it here, if you're interested, including how the vessel that actually brought them back launched last September.

https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/...n-when-basic-spaceflight-truths-are-shredded/

edit: a quote for the click-stubborn.

The reality is that NASA set a plan for the return of Wilmore and Williams last August. The spacecraft that brought them back to Earth on Tuesday safely docked to the space station in September. They could have come home at any time since. NASA—not the Biden administration, which all of my reporting indicates was not involved in any decision-making—decided the best and safest option was to keep Wilmore and Williams in orbit until early this year. Musk knew this plan. He had to sign off on it. Senior NASA officials earlier this month confirmed, publicly and on the record, that the decision was made by the space agency in the best interests of the International Space Station Program.

Oh that rascal Felon Musk twisting things, trying to steal credit again. He's just a pathological liar. :messenger_tears_of_joy:
 
are you saying Musk lied about the Biden administration didn't want to use SpaceX and hand the Trump administration a win thus keeping them in space as a deliberate act of political sabotage? but but Elon told Joe Rogan that's what "ackshullay" happened? say it isnt so
It's surprising and somewhat out of character, isn't it?

From some of the coverage, you'd think that the rocket they launched a few days ago was the one sent up to bring that brave boy (and some random woman) back home. Instead, they've had a taxi waiting in their space garage for about seven months, but have remained on the ISS for so-called "science" and reasons.
 
I imagine the issue was the stranded astronauts using the available spaceX pod, leaving earlier that it was scheduled with the other astronauts and cosmonauts, and then having to send up a replacement return vehicle for the "regular" crew, rather than there being a ship in place all along. Elon I'm sure offered to do it (for a price), but NASA decided to keep them up there rather than eat the cost. Elon can be correct from his POV AND NASA can say this was all according to keikaku, both can be true.
 
What the hell is there to eat up there that would last eight months?

Eight months of that freeze dried ice cream? When they shit where does the doody go? Do they flush it out into the great beyond?
 
What the hell is there to eat up there that would last eight months?

Eight months of that freeze dried ice cream? When they shit where does the doody go? Do they flush it out into the great beyond?
There's a continuous crew up there, including some who arrived long before the two 'stranded' Americans, and who remain there. New crews bring stuff, and they have unmanned supply missions. Waste is packaged up and jettisoned or burned up in the atmosphere.
https://whoisinspace.com/

edit: my bad, I can't count - the American pair were longer serving than the ones the left behind.
 
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