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Crew of Soyuz MS-10 lands in Kazakhstan after launch failure by Staff Writers Moscow (Sputnik) Oct 11, 2018
A Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft atop a Soyuz FG rocket manned by a team of two cosmonauts was set to deliver a team to the International Space Station (ISS). Chief of Russian state space corporation Roscosmos Dmitry Rogozin has commented on the Soyuz MS-10 emergency landing, saying that the Soyuz crew had landed safely and everyone was alive. "The crew has landed. All are alive," Dmitry Rogozin wrote on Twitter. NASA earlier reported that the search and rescue teams were on their way toward the touchdown site of the two Soyuz spacecraft crew members, following a launch accident. "The Soyuz capsule has landed back on Earth carrying two crew members... Search and rescue teams report they are in contact with the Soyuz crew, who report they are in good condition. The teams are en route to the landing site," NASA said on Twitter. The crew of the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft has landed in Kazakhstan and been in contact, a source told Sputnik earlier the same day, adding that the crew feels "good, as well as possible after experiencing such g-forces." According to preliminary data, the Soyuz accident occurred because one of the four first stage units hit second stage and pressure dropped, the source reported. A carrier failure occurred during the launch of the Soyuz spacecraft to the ISS with Russian cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin and NASA astronaut Nick Hague onboard, according to the source speaking to Sputnik. They experienced a g-force of 6gs during the landing, the source noted. A Roscosmos commission will carry out an inspection of the rocket space center where the Soyuz FG rocket was produced, according to the source. "A state commission was formed by my decision to determine the cause of the Soyuz-FG carrier rocket accident. It has already begun work. Telemetry is being studied. "Rescue services have been working from the first second of the accident. The Soyuz-MS spacecraft emergency rescue system worked properly. The crew was rescued," Rogozin wrote on Twitter. Earlier in the day, the rescue teams reported seeing a parachute descending with the craft, after the emergency on the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft. Four Mi-8 helicopters took off from Kazakh airports to search for the crew who landed somewhere in Kazakhstan, the Russian military said. The launch of the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft atop the Soyuz FG rocket manned by a team of two cosmonauts instead of three started at 11:40 a.m. Moscow time (08:40 GMT) on October 11.
First UAE Astronaut to Fly to ISS for 11-Day Mission on April 5, 2019 Moscow (Sputnik) Oct 04, 2018 The first astronaut from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) will fly to the International Space Station (ISS) on April 5, 2019, and will return to Earth on April 16, 2019, the ISS launch schedule, shared with Sputnik, has shown. According to the document, an astronaut will fly to the ISS on board the Russian Soyuz MS-12 spacecraft. It has not been determined yet if Hazza Mansouri or Sultan Nayadi will take part in the mission. Both astronauts have qualified for it and have begun their training i ... read more
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