Albuquerque Journal

Astronaut a bit spacey on call to Earth

Briton on space station dials wrong number

- BY GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — Anyone can dial a wrong number, but it’s not often done from outer space.

British astronaut Tim Peake tweeted an apology on Christmas Day from the Internatio­nal Space Station after calling a wrong number.

He wrote, “I’d like to apologize to the lady I just called by mistake saying ‘Hello, is this planet Earth?’ — not a prank call — just a wrong number!”

The 43-year-old former army helicopter pilot did not say whom he was calling.

Millions of Britons have been following his mission closely since he became Britain’s first publicly funded astronaut and the first Briton to visit the space station.

The nation seemed to come to a halt during liftoff Dec. 15 as many stopped what they were doing and nervously watched live coverage of him leaving for outer space.

An astronomer told Britons they might have a chance to view the space station as it transits above the Earth on Christmas Day.

Robin Scagell of the Society for Popular Astronomy said the station would be flying relatively low when it passes over London and would be “the brightest star in the sky, moving rapidly from west to east.”

Peake plans to conduct experiment­s on how the human body reacts in space and try out a new tea-making process geared toward zero gravity.

He is sharing the space station with five other astronauts from Russia and the United States. Peake’s crewmates are NASA’s Scott Kelly and Tim Kopra and Russians Mikhail Kornienko, Yuri Malenchenk­o and Sergey Volkov.

 ??  ?? PEAKE: Apologizes for misdialing number
PEAKE: Apologizes for misdialing number

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States