Russian spacecraft brings ISS astronauts safely back to Earth

Soyuz MS-09 successfully lands in Kazakhstan


FE Team | Published: December 22, 2018 14:20:03 | Updated: December 25, 2018 14:33:55


Rescuers pulled the crew members out of the capsule. Internet photo

Russian spacecraft Soyuz MS-09 has successfully landed in Kazakhstan, bringing back the three astronauts who have completed their missions on the International Space Station (ISS), the Russian mission control centre said Thursday.

"The landing section with Roscosmos cosmonaut Sergei Prokopyev, NASA astronaut Serena Aunon-Chancellor and astronaut of the European Space Agency Alexander Gerst has landed," it was quoted by local media as saying.

On June 6, Russia successfully launched its Soyuz MS-09 spacecraft to the ISS. The three-member crew had lived on it for the scheduled 187 days.

Their successors, Oleg Kononenko of Russia, Anne McClain of the United States and David Saint-Jacques of Canada arrived in early December and are expected to stay on the ISS for six and a half months.

They were transported by the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft, which was launched on Dec 3. The flight was carried out after a spacecraft lift-off failure in October.

On Oct 11, the capsule of the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft with Russian cosmonaut Alexei Ovchinin and US astronaut Nick Hague on board made an emergency landing in Kazakhstan after the carrier rocket malfunctioned shortly after lift-off.

Russia then suspended manned space missions but sent a cargo ship to the ISS on Nov 16. The Progress MS-10 cargo ship carried about 2.5 tons of various supplies, including fuel, air, water, scientific equipment, and life-support equipment for the ISS crew.

The ISS astronauts have delivered to the Earth the evidence that Russian state space corporation Roscosmos and investigators need for probe into the microfracture found on the orbital module of the Soyuz MS-09 spacecraft in late August, said the Russian mission control centre.

On Dec 12, a spacewalk was conducted by Russian cosmonauts to check the crack that led to a pressure leak at ISS, according to a Xinhua report.

Russia's Soyuz models are currently the only spacecraft for spaceflights between the ISS and the Earth.

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