How will the trapped Boeing Starliner astronauts perceive time after 6 months in space?

The passage of time can slow to a crawl when you're waiting, and waiting, and waiting. How will the Boeing Starliner astronauts feel time move if they have to stay in space for another 6 months?

A photo of a man and a woman floating in a space ship
Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams onboard the International Space Station. 
(Image credit: NASA)

Two astronauts marooned in space may sound like the plot of a Hollywood blockbuster, but for two NASA crew members, it is now a reality. Commander Barry Wilmore and pilot Sunita Williams are currently in limbo on the International Space Station (ISS).

They arrived in the Boeing Starliner spacecraft — the first test of the spaceship with astronauts. Wilmore and Williams were supposed to stay on the ISS for around eight days and return on the same spacecraft. But there is now debate about the safety of Starliner after it experienced helium leaks and thruster problems on its way to the ISS.

Ruth Ogden
Professor of the Psychology of Time, Liverpool John Moores University

Ruth Ogden has been a psychology researcher at Liverpool John Moores University since 2009. Her research explores all aspects of how people experience the passage of time. Her particular area of focus is on understanding why time passes more quickly during some activities and more slowly during others, and how significant changes in life and society affect temporality.