NASA is about to make its most important safety decision in nearly a generation
NASA is about to make its most important safety decision in nearly a generation
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Three Starliner mission managers had key roles on Columbia's ill-fated final flight.
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NASA is about to make its most important safety decision in nearly a generation
Three Starliner mission managers had key roles on Columbia's ill-fated final flight.
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Shitty Boeing aside, how are they eating up there? I don't know anything about space station food logistics, but if a planned week has turned into ten weeks, surely there must be a resource strain.
Edit: Google search says they can regularly send up unmanned supply ships.
Can’t wait to see this project too in Google’s graveyard.
Ah, the old lemmy switcharoo
Hold my Reddit account I'm going in!
They eat whichever astronaut dies first.
Just don't question the cause of death, because it will be blunt force trauma
Don't they have their own version of MREs they use for situations like this?
They just send up more food.
Imagine that Uber Eats bill.
Fr. Imagine the expected tip.
Instructions: please ring door bell
Please leave anywhere near the airlock. Pls don't ring or knock, dogs bark.
they must have a significant food bank supply, including some kind of reserve replacement nutrients in the event shit goes wrong. That or an incredibly redundant delivery network.
Cygnus, last mission launched on 4 August 2024.
I was curious about this same thing.
I though I read they're currently housed in the ISS so they should have reserves. I initially thought they were stuck in their launch vehicle.