U.S. astronaut Rubio says 'good to be home' after landing in Kazakhstan
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[September 28, 2023]
ALMATY (Reuters) -U.S. astronaut Frank Rubio, who broke
the record for the longest continuous space flight by an American, and
two Russian cosmonauts landed in the steppe of Kazakhstan on Wednesday
after more than a year on the International Space Station (ISS).
Their Soyuz MS-23 capsule undocked from the ISS a minute earlier than
scheduled, and took around three and a half hours to make it down to
Earth, landing southeast of the city of Zhezqazghan.
"It's good to be home," Rubio, 47, said with a smile after landing with
Russian cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev, 48, and Dmitry Petelin, 40.
Asked how his crew mates had been, Rubio said: "Fantastic, yeah,
everybody did really well."
Rubio was given a Russian matryoshka doll while Prokopyev was shown
smiling beside the capsule and holding an watermelon which he requested
on landing. When asked what he had brought back from space, he said: "A
good mood".
Russian mission control at Star City outside Moscow said the crew felt
fine after just over a year on the ISS. They landed on time at 1117 GMT.
Rubio, who is on his first space voyage, was shown being carried out of
the capsule, which was darkened by the temperatures of reentry. He gave
a thumbs up and waved as Russian and U.S. space officials took his blood
pressure and heart rate and covered him with a blanket.
The three men are six months late to return because their original
spacecraft sprang a leak so a replacement had to be sent up to get them
back. That gave them an unexpectedly extended mission of 371 days in
orbit.
RECORD RUBIO
On Sept. 11, Rubio surpassed the previous NASA record of 355 consecutive
days in space set by now-retired U.S. astronaut Mark Vande Hei. Rubio is
also the first American to spend a full year in space.
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International Space Station (ISS) crew members, Roscosmos cosmonauts
Sergey Prokopyev, Dmitry Petelin and NASA astronaut Frank Rubio,
rest in chairs after landing in the Soyuz MS-23 space capsule in a
remote area near Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, September 27, 2023.
NASA/Bill Ingalls/Handout via REUTERS
Though Rubio broke the American record, he and his Russian
colleagues are far from the world record held by Russia's Valeri
Polyakov, who spent 437 consecutive days and 18 hours during a Mir
space station mission between January 1994 and March 1995. Polyakov
died last September aged 80.
Roscosmos said that Prokopyev had spent a total of more than 567
days in space, including previous trips.
Rubio, the son of Salvadoran parents who was born in Los Angeles but
grew up in Miami, is a board-certified family physician and flight
surgeon, a onetime U.S. Army special forces officer and a decorated
Blackhawk helicopter pilot who flew combat missions in Bosnia,
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Speaking to reporters from orbit eight days before his return to
Earth, Rubio said he probably would have turned down what became his
first spaceflight had he known in advance that the mission would go
on for at least a year.
Rubio, who is married with four children, cited family obligations,
but in the end he said he felt honored and took the extension of the
mission in stride.
He said it would likely take months to regain his full sense of
balance and strength after a prolonged stay in microgravity, and
that he looks forward to the quiet of his backyard, compared with
the constant drone and hum of machinery while aboard the ISS.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Editing by Mark Trevelyan, Gareth Jones and Philippa
Fletcher)
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