Sunita Williams, International Space Station
newsbytesapp.com · 1h
Sunita Williams—stuck in orbit for 225 days—completes 6-hour-long spacewalk
NASA astronaut Sunita Williams has successfully completed her eighth spacewalk, bringing her total extravehicular activity (EVA) time to nearly 57 hours. The six-hour EVA was conducted on January 16 with fellow astronaut Nick Hague. The duo stepped outside the International Space Station (ISS) to conduct critical repairs and upgrades.
Mint · 5h
Watch | NASA’s Sunita Williams marks first spacewalk in over seven months on ISS after delays
Indian-origin astronaut Sunita Williams conducted her first spacewalk in over seven months alongside NASA’s Nick Hague. This marked her eighth spacewalk during an extended ISS mission due to delays with Boeing’s Starliner and SpaceX’s crew replacement.
Indiatimes · 13h
Nasa astronaut Sunita Williams steps out of ISS for iconic spacewalk after 7 months in orbit – see pics
After over seven months aboard the International Space Station, Indian-origin astronaut Sunita Williams stepped out for her first spacewalk, tackling overdue repairs alongside NASA colleague Nick Hague,
Daily Jang · 12h
Sunita Williams completes first spacewalk in over seven months: Watch
Sunita Williams, the commander of the International Space Station , conducted her first spacewalk in more than seven months on Thursday, January 16.As per multiple outlets, she was accompanied by NASA astronaut Nick Hague to perform a
in.mashable · 4d
Sunita Williams To Perform Back-To-Back Spacewalks For The First Time In 12 Years
NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Nick Hague are preparing for 2025's first spacewalk this week. According to NASA, the astronauts will step out of the International Space Station (ISS) at 6:30 pm IST on January 16, followed by another at 5:45 pm IST on January 23.
Popular Science · 14h
Starliner astronaut conducts spacewalk while stuck aboard ISS
At the time of writing, Williams and ISS crewmate, Nick Hague, are conducting NASA’s first spacewalk in over a year. The pair are scheduled to spend roughly 6.5 hours in the vacuum of space, where they will work on a number of long overdue external repairs and equipment assessments.
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