Russian cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin and U.S.
astronaut Francisco Rubio, who had been due to end their mission in
March, were left stuck in space after the cooling system of their
Soyuz MS-22 capsule started leaking two months ago.
"(Their return flight) is now scheduled to take place on Soyuz MS-23
in September 2023," Russian space agency Roscosmos said.
The Soyuz MS-23 replacement capsule will launch on Feb. 24 and will
dock with the ISS on Feb. 26, it said. The damaged MS-22 spacecraft
is planned to land without a crew in March.
Both NASA and Roscosmos believe last year's leak on the MS-22
spacecraft was caused by a micrometeoroid - a tiny particle of space
rock hitting the capsule at high velocity.
An external impact is also believed to have caused a separate leak
earlier this month on the cooling system of the Progress MS-21 cargo
ship, which officials deorbited last week.
Both leaks have caused headaches for Roscosmos and NASA, which have
had to rearrange their schedules and postpone planned space walks as
a result.
"Space missions always carry a huge risk of life-threatening
emergencies for astronauts," Roscosmos said. "Micrometeoroid impacts
on a spacecraft or orbital station have happened before, but unlike
with the Soyuz MS-22, they have never had such serious
consequences."
"No country in the world has a surveillance system capable of
tracking micrometeoroids of this size - about 1 millimetre."
It said overhauling the Soyuz cooling system would be costly and add
weight to the capsule, but that it would take past incidents into
account when developing new spacecraft.
(Reporting by Caleb Davis and Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Bernadette
Baum)
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