Russian rescue craft lifts off to International Space Station to bring back two stranded cosmonauts and astronaut

The takeoff and orbiting of the ship “went normally”. The mission will last until September.

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A Russian Soyuz spacecraft took off on the night of Thursday February 23 to Friday February 24 from Kazakhstan in the direction of the International Space Station. The objective is to bring back to Earth in September two Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut whose initial ship was damaged, after suffering a spectacular leak, due according to Moscow to the impact of a micrometeorite.

The MS-23 rescue craft took off, with no one on board, from the Baikonur cosmodrome, according to live video broadcasts from Russia’s Roscosmos space agency and NASA. Liftoff and orbiting of the spacecraft “unfolded normally”, Roscosmos announced in a statement. Docking with the International Space Station (ISS) is scheduled for February 26.

A mission extended until September

Initially, the takeoff of this device was initially scheduled for mid-March and it was to carry a new crew of three to the space station. The ship finally left empty in order to be able to bring back the three passengers stranded on board the ISS: the American Frank Rubio as well as the Russians Sergei Prokopiev and Dmitri Peteline.

In the absence of a crew to replace them, the mission was extended until September, when they were originally due to return at the end of March. They will therefore spend a total of about a year in space, instead of six months. However, they won’t be the first to stay that long on board the ISS, as that duration was matched just last year.


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