First thing I did after reaching space was to locate countries of my father, mother; I missed meeting Grp Capt Shukla on ISS who came after I left: Sunita Williams
“Though I spent nine months in space during my latest trip to the ISS, I missed meeting Group Captain Subhanshu Shukla who reached the station just after I left,” Williams said during an interactive session, 'Eyes on the Stars, Feet on the Ground' at American Center here.
During her last trip to space before hanging her astronaut suit, Williams went to ISS in 2024 for a scheduled 8-day space trip but had to spend 9 months on ISS as the Boeing Starliner that took her to ISS malfunctioned and had to return empty-handed. Later, SpaceX's Dragon brought Williams and her crewmate Butch Wilmore back to Earth on March 18, 2025, with the duo ending up spending 286 days in space. India’s Group Capt Shukla went to space as part of the Axiom mission on June 25, 2025.
After nearly three decades in space exploration, Nasa astronaut Sunita Williams retired, effective December 27, 2025, bringing down the curtain on a 27-year career that reshaped human spaceflight and inspired a generation of astronauts worldwide.
Born in Euclid, Ohio, to an Indian-Slovenian family, Williams grew up in Massachusetts, later graduating from the US Naval Academy and Florida Institute of Technology before embarking on a distinguished career in naval aviation and space exploration.
Williams was selected as a Nasa astronaut in 1998 and underwent intensive training, preparing her for missions aboard the Space Shuttle and the International Space Station, while also contributing to robotics, mission planning, and international collaboration.
She first flew into space in December 2006 aboard Space Shuttle Discovery, serving as a flight engineer on Expeditions 14 and 15 and setting a then-record for women by completing four spacewalks during a single mission.
In 2012, Williams returned to space aboard a Soyuz spacecraft, spending 127 days on the ISS and becoming commander of Expedition 33, overseeing scientific research and critical repair work on the orbiting laboratory.
Across three missions, Williams logged 608 days in space, completed nine spacewalks totalling over 62 hours, and became the woman with the most cumulative spacewalking time, ranking fourth on Nasa’s all-time list.
Alongside her missions, Williams held key leadership roles at Nasa, worked with the Russian space agency, trained astronauts underwater during NEEMO missions, and helped develop helicopter training programmes for future Moon landings.
In June 2024, Williams launched aboard Boeing’s Starliner for its first crewed test flight, marking a crucial step in Nasa’s commercial crew programme and once again placing her at the forefront of spaceflight innovation.
Technical issues with Starliner turned what was meant to be a short mission into a nine-month stay aboard the ISS, as Williams continued station operations and later commanded Expedition 72 during the prolonged mission.
Williams finally returned to Earth in March 2025 aboard SpaceX’s Crew-9 mission, safely concluding one of the longest unplanned space stays by a Nasa astronaut and demonstrating resilience under extraordinary circumstances.
Williams faced several health issues after returning to Earth after remaining in zero gravity for a long time. However, the 60-year-old was seen in high spirits in Delhi on Tuesday, guiding and inspiring Indian students to join the space sector. To cheer her at the Delhi event was the mother of another Indian-American astronaut, Kalpana Chawla, who died in the Space Shuttle Columbia crash in 2003. Williams, wearing a trademark deep blue space overalls and sporting a pair of space-themed canvas shoes, stepped off the dais and reached out to Chawla’s mother, Sanyogita Chawla, 90, who was sitting in the front row, and gave her a warm hug.
Williams asserted that the horizon of space exploration is rapidly expanding beyond traditional boundaries, stating that the commercialisation of space is creating unprecedented opportunities for innovation. “Commercialisation of space is great. It means there are opportunities for people to work in so many different companies— not only rockets and spacecraft, but parts of space, experiments, satellites, and 3D printing of metals,” she said.
“In my childhood, I never dreamt of becoming an astronaut. We used to watch Star Trek on black & white TV. After I did my schooling and graduated, my brother pushed me to join the military and, thereafter, I became a Navy officer,” she said. Williams had logged more than 3,000 flight hours in more than 30 types of aircraft during her career in the US Navy before donning the astronaut suit. While flying aircraft as a Navy commander, I then wished that I should go to the Moon. From then on, I pursued the career of an astronaut,” Williams recalled.
“When I reached the ISS, I was craving for Indian food. I was delighted to see that somebody sent me an Indian dish (in the food cargo) though others were making faces. I was glad to also receive 3D printed models of my dogs on ISS.” In Nasa circles, Williams was called the ‘samosa astronaut’, as she liked carrying samosas to space.
An athlete since childhood, Williams wanted to participate in a marathon. “So, my sister told me, ‘I will run on your behalf on the ground and you run in space. So that is how I decided to run a marathon in space,” she revealed. Williams ran the Boston Marathon in space in 2007 after qualifying by running the Houston Marathon in 2006, marking the first time a marathon was completed in orbit. She ran on a treadmill aboard the ISS, finishing in 4 hours and 24 minutes while her sister and others ran on Earth.
Recalling her most difficult space job, Williams said she went for a spacewalk after the Starliner faced a technical issue and returned to Earth and the Dragon spacecraft was docking at ISS. “While I was replacing a defected reflector, I had ensured that the Dragon capsule was not damaged with my steel helmet. So, I did the job of replacing the reflector by bending my head on one side for over 1.5 hours. After I returned to my space cabin, I faced neck cramps the whole time.”
Williams, during her extended 9-month stay on ISS, conducted along with her crew over 150 scientific experiments and technological demonstrations, accumulating more than 900 hours of research across various fields like space gardening, microgravity biology, and water recovery systems.
The Nasa astronaut said the perception about life on Earth changes when people go to space. “I am married and I argue with my husband like other couples do. But after reaching space (seeing the vast expanse of universe), I used to wonder why we argue (on minor issues) at all,” she said, adding, “The first thing I ate after returning to Earth was the bread my husband baked for me.”
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