Russian rescue craft arrives at the International Space Station

A Russian Soyuz spacecraft docked overnight from Saturday to Sunday at the International Space Station in order to serve, next September, as a vehicle for the return to Earth of two Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut, whose initial spacecraft has been damaged.

The MS-23 rescue craft took off Friday morning from Kazakhstan, with no one on board, and reached the space station after a journey of about two days, according to a NASA live video broadcast.

The American Frank Rubio, as well as the Russians Sergei Prokopiev and Dmitri Peteline, took off at the end of September 2022 with the Soyuz MS-22. But in December, this vessel suffered a spectacular leak while it was docked with the ISS, due according to Moscow to the impact of a micrometeorite.

The Russian space agency therefore decided that it could only be used in an emergency, and chose to send the MS-23 spacecraft as a replacement.

The mission of the three crew members has been extended until September, and they will therefore return on board this replacement ship after spending approximately a year in space.

The damaged MS-22 ship must be undocked from the ISS and return to Earth empty, a priori at the end of next month.

In addition to the three crew members who came aboard the Soyuz, the ISS currently has four other passengers, who arrived with a SpaceX ship and are members of the mission called Crew-5. They are to be joined next week by Crew-6, which includes two Americans, an Emirati and a Russian, and is scheduled to take off Sunday night into Monday from Florida, United States.

After a handover of a few days, Crew-5 will descend back to Earth


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