Three
space station crewmen return safely to Earth in Kazakhstan
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[November 10, 2014]
By Irene Klotz
(Reuters) - A veteran Russian cosmonaut
and two International Space Station crewmates, one from the United
States and one from Germany, returned safely to Earth on Sunday with a
parachute landing of their Soyuz capsule in Kazakhstan, ending 5-1/2
months in orbit.
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Maxim Suraev of the Russian space agency, who was commander of the
station during the mission, climbed into the Soyuz craft with NASA
astronaut Reid Wiseman and German flight engineer Alexander Gerst
from the European Space Agency and departed the orbital outpost at
7:31 p.m. EST.
About 3-1/2 hours later, the capsule descended through cold, windy
and overcast skies to touch down on the frozen steppes northeast of
Arkalyk.
Early-morning temperatures in Kazakhstan registered just 23 degrees
Fahrenheit (minus-5 degrees Celsius), mission commentator Rob Navias
said on a live NASA Television broadcast of the landing.
Recovery teams were standing by to help Suraev, Wiseman and Gerst
out of their capsule, the same spacecraft they rode to reach the
station on May 28.
The crew's last few weeks in orbit were among the busiest of their
mission, with the departure of a Dragon cargo capsule sent to the
station by private launch company Space Exploration Technologies and
the arrival of a Russian freighter.
The Russian cargo ship docked with the station less than a day after
an unmanned Orbital Sciences Corp. rocket carrying another supply
capsule bound for the space station exploded seconds after liftoff
from Virginia.
"It’s been an honor and a privilege to spend 165 days up here. With
that said, I’m looking forward to heading home," Wiseman said during
a change-of-command ceremony carried live from the space station on
NASA Television.
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Two other Russian cosmonauts and the newly named station commander,
NASA astronaut Barry “Butch” Wilmore, remained aboard the orbital
outpost, a $100-billion research laboratory that flies about 260
miles (418 km) above Earth.
They will be joined on Nov. 23 by cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, NASA
astronaut Terry Virts and Italy’s Samantha Cristoforetti, who will
fly aboard another Soyuz capsule launching from the Baikonur
Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
The space station, which has been permanently staffed since Nov. 2,
2000, is owned and run by a partnership of 15 nations.
"They say this is the most complex machine that humanity has ever
built," Gerst said on Saturday. "Even after half a year on board, it
is impossible for me to fathom how complex it is to actually operate
this machine."
(Reporting by Irene Klotz from Cape Canaveral, Fla.; Editing by
Steve Gorman, Eric Walsh and Clarence Fernandez)
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