Herald on Sunday

Astronauts land to new reality

US-Russian space crew lands safely in Kazakhstan exactly 50 years after Apollo 13 emergency splashdown

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AUS-Russian crew landed safely yesterday in the steppes of Kazakhstan following a stint on the Internatio­nal Space Station and was greeted with extra precaution­s due to the coronaviru­s.

NASA astronauts Jessica Meir and Andrew Morgan along with Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka touched down as scheduled. Their Soyuz capsule landed under a striped orange-and-white parachute about 150km southeast of Dzhezkazga­n in central Kazakhstan.

Russian officials said they took stringent measures to protect the crew members amid the pandemic. The recovery team and medical personnel assigned to help the three out of the capsule and to perform post-flight checks were under close medical observatio­n for nearly a

It is quite surreal for us to see this whole situation unfolding on the planet below. Earth still looks just as stunning as always from up here.

month before the landing and were tested for the coronaviru­s.

Dmitry Rogozin, director of Russia’s Roscosmos space corporatio­n, said the three astronauts were feeling well.

Morgan wrapped up a 272-day mission on his first flight into space. He conducted seven space walks, four of which were to improve and extend the life of the station’s Alpha Magnetic Spectromet­er, which looks for evidence of dark matter in the universe.

Meir and Skripochka spent 205 days in space, with Meir carrying out the first three all-women spacewalks with crewmate Christina Koch, who returned from space in February.

The crew members smiled as they talked to medical experts wearing masks. After a quick checkup, they were flown by helicopter to Baikonur. From there, Skripochka will be taken to Moscow, while Morgan and Meir will be driven from Baikonur to Kyzylorda, 300km away, to board a NASA flight to Houston.

Restrictio­ns on internatio­nal flights imposed by Kazakhstan required the long drive, said Vyacheslav Rogozhniko­v, a Russian medical official who oversaw the crew’s return.

“A 300km ride after landing is quite a load on the astronauts,” he said, adding that Russia deployed its doctors to help the astronauts during the journey, if needed.

Skripochka will spend three weeks under observatio­n at a medical facility at the Star City cosmonaut training centre outside Moscow, Russian space corporatio­n Roscosmos said. Star City officials said the medical personnel monitoring him will wear hazmat suits to protect him from becoming infected with the new virus.

The crew returned to Earth exactly 50 years after the Apollo 13 astronauts splashed down in the Pacific after an oxygen tank explosion aborted the moon-landing mission.

Speaking from the orbiting outpost before their landing, the three said that coming back to a world drasticall­y changed by the pandemic would be challengin­g.

Morgan said they tried to keep up with coronaviru­s news in space, but added that it was hard to comprehend what was really going on below.

“It is quite surreal for us to see this whole situation unfolding on the planet below,” Meir said. “We can tell you that the Earth still looks just as stunning as always from up here, so it’s difficult to believe all the changes that have taken place since both of us have been up here.”

A new crew comprising NASA’s Chris Cassidy and Russians Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner arrived at the station on April 9. They said before blastoff that they had been under strict quarantine for a month before the flight and felt well.

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir

 ?? Photo / AP ?? US astronaut Jessica Meir is greeted by a recovery team and medical personnel who had been tested for coronaviru­s.
Photo / AP US astronaut Jessica Meir is greeted by a recovery team and medical personnel who had been tested for coronaviru­s.

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