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November 11, 2014

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3 space station crewmen return to Earth

A THREE-MAN multinational crew of astronauts returned to the Earth on Sunday aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, after spending 165 days working together at the International Space Station.

ISS commander, Russia’s Maxim Surayev, his American colleague Reid Wiseman and German Alexander Gerst from the European Space Agency touched down at 10:58pm on Sunday.

The three men smiled broadly from reclining chairs as medical personnel tended to them amid patches of snow on the barren steppe just northeast of Arkalyk, Kazakhstan, where they landed.

Surayev flashed a V for victory sign while Wiseman pumped his fist as they waited to regain their land legs after nearly half a year of weightlessness.

“Everything was in the spirit of cooperation, so I think that everybody needs to learn and follow the example of the ISS crew members,” Surayev said. “Let’s try to live together side by side. This is the most important thing,” he added.

While in space the crew traveled more than 112.7 million kilometers, NASA said. The “bulls-eye” touchdown was executed amid low clouds and fog “following a flawless descent back into the atmosphere,” according to NASA TV.

The spacecraft was pulled onto its side by its parachute upon arrival, which NASA TV added was not uncommon.

The US space agency said the “departure of Wiseman, Gerst and Surayev marks the end of Expedition 41,” referring to their mission to the ISS to carry out equipment repairs, maintenance and experiments. Surayev was on his second long ISS mission, having now spent a total of 334 days in space, while the other two astronauts were on their first trip. The three men were pictured smiling and with their arms around each other before hitching the ride back home, undocking from ISS at 7:31pm.

Another three-person crew remains on the ISS to “continue research and maintenance aboard the station” and will be joined by three more astronauts who launch from Kazakhstan on November 23. NASA lost its ability to reach the space station when the shuttle program ended in 2011 after 30 years. The US space agency has helped fund private companies in a push to restore US access to the ISS.

In the meantime, the world’s astronauts must rely on Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft to get to the ISS and back, at a cost of US$70 million per seat.




 

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