Bangkok Post

Record-breaking astronaut comes back to Earth

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WASHINGTON: A record-shattering Nasa astronaut touched down to Earth yesterday, finishing a 288-day mission that put her over the top as the American who has spent the most cumulative amount of time in space.

Peggy Whitson, 57, is also the oldest female astronaut in the history of space exploratio­n, was the first female Internatio­nal Space Station commander, and holds the record for number of spacewalks (10) by a woman.

The biochemist completed a mission at the Internatio­nal Space Station that began in November 2016, covering 197 million km and 4,623 orbits of Earth.

She and crewmates Jack Fischer of Nasa and Fyodor Yurchikhin of Russian space agency Roscosmos landed in Kazakhstan at 7.31am yesterday in a Soyuz MS-04 spacecraft.

Ms Whitson has racked up 665 days in space in her career, more than any other US astronaut. She is eighth on the all-time space endurance list, Nasa said.

Her colleague Jack “2Fish” Fischer, 43, went into space as a rookie but has won over space-watchers with his boundless Ground personnel help US astronaut Peggy Whitson after landing in a remote area outside the town of Dzhezkazga­n, Kazakhstan, yesterday.

enthusiasm during his four-and-a-half months aboard the ISS.

He likened the feeling of his spacewalk with Ms Whitson in May — the 200th ISS spacewalk — to a “ginormous fondue pot, bubbling over with piping hot awesomesau­ce”.

“Heading home soon ... I hope I infected a few of you with my passion for space. Never stop learning and growing. I dare you to dream!” he tweeted Friday.

Nasa footage showed Ms Whitson brought out last from the capsule before being seated and handed flowers by a member of the crew at the landing site.

After earning a doctorate in biochemist­ry in 1985, Ms Whitson worked as a Nasa scientist for seven years before starting as an astronaut in 1997.

On this most recent mission, she conducted experiment­s with human stem cells, blood samples and grew several crops of Chinese cabbagee.

“The best part, was that after we harvested for the science, we got to eat the rest!” she said of her greens.

In an interview before departing the space station, Ms Whitson said she was looking forward to flush toilets (“Trust me, you don’t want to know the details”) and pizza.

But, “I will miss seeing the enchanting­ly peaceful limb of our Earth from this vantage point. Until the end of my days, my eyes will search the horizon to see that curve,” she said, according to the Nasa website.

She noted that she’s not totally comfortabl­e with the attention she receives for her various records and her status as a role model.

“I honestly do think that it is critical that we are continuous­ly breaking records, because that represents us moving forward in exploratio­n,” Ms Whitson said.

“I am not sure what the future holds for me personally, but I envision myself continuing to work on spacefligh­t programmes.

“My desire to contribute to the spacefligh­t team as we move forward in our exploratio­n of space has only increased over the years,” she said of her plans.

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