Starliner was booked to get back from ISS on June 14, however Nasa has not given a return date of space travelers
While trying to rescue its situation following quite a while of negative titles, Public Air transportation and Space Organization's (NASA) business team program supervisor has guaranteed that the space travelers on board the Boeing Starliner are "not abandoned" at the Worldwide Space Station.
Following quite a while of postponements, Boeing's Starliner container conveying space explorers Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams took off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Power Station on June 5, AFP revealed.
At first, the Starliner was set to get back from ISS on June 14, yet was pushed back for June 26. In any case, presently the return is overall further deferred because of numerous helium spills.
At the point when gotten some information about the return date of the space travelers, the Nasa official said, "We don't have a designated (landing) date today."
In a public interview on Friday, the director said, "Butch and Suni are not abandoned in space."
He added that the pair were "partaking in their experience on the space station" and "our expectation is to keep on returning them on Starliner and return them home with impeccable timing.".
As per reports, one helium spill was known before the send off; be that as it may, more holes arose during the 25-hour flight.
Independently, a portion of Starliner's engines that give fine moving at first neglected to kick in, postponing docking. Engineers are don't know why Starliner's PC "deselected" these engines, however they had the option to restart everything except one of them.
While discussing the negative remarks, Boeing's VP and Program Administrator of its Business Group Program, Imprint Nappi, said, "pretty agonizing to peruse the things are out there. We've gotten a great practice run that has been achieved up until this point, and it's being seen rather adversely."