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How Sunita Williams is continuing her career in space

IANS  |  Washington 

Indian-origin is now helping privately-held companies like and Boeing to develop their new systems, which will eventually provide services to the (ISS).

After completing two missions to the orbiting laboratory, she is continuing her career in space on Earth as a member of NASA's Commercial Crew Capability (CCtCap), npr.org reported on Sunday.

She is among the four astronauts who were selected by NASA in 2015 to train and prepare for commercial space flights that will return American launches to US soil and further open up low-Earth orbit to the private sector, according to the US space agency.

Since the discontinuation of NASA's Space Shuttle programme in 2011, US astronauts have had to rely on Russian shuttles to get into orbit.

The goal of the commercial crew programme is safe, reliable and cost-effective to and from the from the US through a public-private approach.

NASA, Boeing and have significant testing underway, which will ultimately lead to test missions when the systems are ready and meet safety requirements.

Boeing's Starliner will launch on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Space 41 and SpaceX's Crew Dragon will launch on the company's 9 rocket from 39A, according to NASA.

After completion of each company's uncrewed and crewed flight tests, NASA will review the flight data to verify the systems meet the requirements for certification.

Upon NASA certification, the companies are each slated to fly six crew missions to the ISS beginning in 2019 and continuing through 2024, NASA said in January this year.

Williams, 52, has spent 50 hours and 40 minutes outside the ISS and part of her new job is to verify that the companies' can launch, manoeuvre in orbit and dock to stationary like the ISS, according to the npr.org report.

"This is really different from my old job, you know," Williams was quoted as saying.

"She is currently assigned to the cadre of astronauts training to fly the initial test flights for America's first commercially built and Dragon," according to the biography of the at the NASA website.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 26 2018. 19:54 IST
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