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Space crew returns to earth from station
A Russian Soyuz spacecraft carrying a U.S.-Russian-Dutch crew returned to Earth on Friday from the international space station, landing on target in the steppes of Kazakhstan.
Shortly before the landing, Russian space officials at mission control outside Moscow said they had been in radio contact with the crew members and all three were feeling fine. Search and rescue helicopters glimpsed the space capsule as it neared the ground, and the space officials broke into applause when the landing was reported. The homeward journey took about 3 1/2 hours, ending on the vast, wide-open steppes of Kazakhstan at 4:11 a.m. Moscow time (8:11 p.m. EST Thursday). The first helicopter reached the site within minutes and its crew reported that the capsule was lying upright, on its bottom. It was the third time an American astronaut had come back to Earth aboard a Russian craft since the U.S. manned space program grounded its shuttle fleet following the February 2003 Columbia disaster. The landing of the space station's previous American-Russian crew in October was smooth and on target ¡ª unlike the dramatic landing of the first American astronaut in a Russian Soyuz capsule in May 2003, when a computer error sent the crew on a wild descent 250 miles off-course. Col. Mikhail Polukhin, coordinator of the Russian space agency's search and rescue operations, said Thursday his men were prepared for any situation but added there was no cause for worry. "Our main fear is about weather, but the forecast has been good," he said.
The Russian space agency was prepared for three landing possibilities. The most likely landing spot is 29 miles northeast of the town of Arkalyk ¡ª a base for five main search and rescue helicopters. Russian space officials said Wednesday that the Soyuz spacecraft, which had been in space for six months, was leaking helium. But both Russian and American space officials said the leak was very minor and would not affect the landing. "There is no risk," NASA spokesman Robert Navias said in Kostanai. Helium is used to pressurize the Soyuz craft's fuel tanks for its de-orbit descent. Navias said the leak was discovered after the craft's October launch but said there was "plenty of helium" onboard to allow normal landing. With less than an hour to go before the scheduled landing, the Soyuz fired its engines to slow its descent and put it into the right trajectory for reaching its planned destination on Earth. Space officials at mission control said the operation went smoothly, proving that the helium leak posed no threat. Foale and Kaleri formally handed over the station to Russian Gennady Padalka and American Michael Fincke when they climbed into the Soyuz TMA-3 and closed the hatches between the station and the spacecraft. Kuipers was on the station under a commercial agreement between ESA and the Russian space agency. |
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