Four-astronaut team departs International Space Station on flight back
to Earth
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[May 05, 2022] By
Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -The third long-duration team of
astronauts launched by SpaceX to the International Space Station (ISS)
for NASA safely departed the orbiting outpost early on Thursday to begin
their descent back to Earth, capping a six-month science mission.
The SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule carrying three U.S. NASA astronauts and a
German astronaut from the European Space Agency undocked from the ISS at
1:20 a.m. EDT (0520 GMT) to embark on a return flight expected to last
about 23 hours.
Live video showing the capsule drifting away from the station as the two
vehicles soared high over Australia was shown on a NASA webcast.
Wearing helmeted white-and-black spacesuits, the four astronauts were
seen strapped into the crew cabin shortly before the spacecraft
separated from the space station, orbiting some 250 miles (400 km) above
the Earth.
A series of several brief rocket thrusts then autonomously pushed the
capsule safely clear of the ISS and lowered its orbit to line up the
spacecraft for later atmospheric re-entry and splashdown.
If all goes smoothly, the Crew Dragon craft, dubbed Endurance, will
parachute into the sea off the coast of Florida at 12:43 a.m. EDT on
Friday (0443 GMT).
The Endurance crew, consisting of American astronauts Tom Marshburn, 61,
Raja Chari, 44 and Kayla Barron, 34, along with ESA crewmate Matthias
Maurer, 52, arrived at the space station on Nov. 11.
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NASA's Raja Chari, Tom Marshburn, Kayla Barron and Matthias Maurer,
a German with the European Space Agency (ESA), arrive prior to their
voyage to the International Space Station on a SpaceX Falcon 9
rocket, at Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. October 26, 2021.
REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo
Their departure came about a week after they welcomed
their replacement team aboard the station, also currently home to
three Russian cosmonauts on a long-term mission. One of those
cosmonauts, Oleg Artemyev, assumed command of the ISS from Marshburn
in a handover before Thursday's undocking, NASA said.
Earlier in April, a separate all-private astronaut crew launched by
SpaceX to the space station under contract for the Houston-based
company Axiom Space left the orbiting laboratory, concluding two
weeks in orbit.
The NASA-ESA team flying home on Thursday was officially designated
"Crew 3," the third full-fledged long-duration group of astronauts
that SpaceX has launched to the space station for the U.S. space
agency.
They will be carrying some 550 pounds of cargo with them on their
flight back to Earth.
SpaceX, the California-based company founded in 2002 by Elon Musk,
the billionaire CEO of electric carmarker Tesla Inc who recently
clinched a deal to buy social media platform Twitter, has launched a
total of seven human spaceflights over the past two years.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman from Los Angeles; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore and Stephen Coates)
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