Russian space officials said a software glitch and possible
lapse in human attention were to blame for the mishap that
caused the entire space station to pitch out of its normal
flight position 250 miles above the Earth with seven crew
members aboard.
Footage published late on Saturday showed cosmonauts Oleg
Novitsky and Pyotr Dubrov opening the hatches and giving a short
tour inside the Nauka module, the Russian space agency Roscosmos
said.
According to NASA's account of Thursday's incident, the mission
flight director immediately declared a spaceflight emergency as
engineers on the ground struggled to restore stability to the
sprawling research satellite.
NASA and Roscosmos each said that the seven crew members - two
Russian cosmonauts, three U.S. astronauts and two others from
Japan and France - were never in any immediate danger.
Roscosmos, which this week spoke of plans to launch another
Russian module to the station in November, has suffered a series
of mishaps and corruption scandals, including during the
construction of the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the country's far
east where contractors were accused of embezzling state funds.
(Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Giles Elgood)
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