Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Kazakhstan greets record setting three space station astronauts


(MENAFN- Arab News) ASTANA/MOSCOW: Kazakhstan welcomed the world's most experienced space flier and two rookie crewmates on Saturday including Denmark's first-ever astronaut who returned from the International Space Station with a bull's-eye parachute landing.
Russia's Gennady Padalka Andreas Mogensen of the European Space Agency and Aidyn Aimbetov of Kazakhstan landed on the steppe just two minutes before sunrise and were feeling fine. Their Soyuz TMA-16M capsule touched down on schedule at 0651 local time (0051 GMT) Saturday 146 km southeast of Dzhezkazgan in what a NASA commentator called a 'bull's-eye landing.'
Padalka 57 the former station commander returned from his fifth spaceflight with a record 879 days in orbit. He broke the record of six-time flier Sergei Krikalev who has a career total 803 days in space.
Several hours later the trio were brought by helicopter to the airport of Kazakhstan's capital Astana where Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev gave them a red-carpet reception.
'You've spent so much time in space but you look great' Nazarbayev told Padalka.
'I congratulate you on your cosmonaut and all of us on the successful completion of our work' Padalka said.
'There are 200 states in the world but not all of them get the luck of sending their citizens into space' Nazarbayev said. 'We are one of those rare cases - and we have launched three cosmonauts already not one.'
Mogensen said the crew had had 'a fantastic mission' at the ISS whose nine members represented five different nationalities at the time.
'This is a superb example of what can be achieved together when we work together across borders and boundaries' he said.
Nazarbayev later gave the crew apples a symbol of Kazakhstan and a plane took them to Russia's Star City.
Mogensen and Aimbetov launched with Padalka's replacement cosmonaut Sergey Volkov on Sept. 2.
That flight was originally to have included British soprano and aspiring space tourist Sarah Brightman. Citing family reasons Brightman stopped training in May and relinquished her seat to Aimbetov.
Volkov remains aboard the station along with five crewmates including newly named commander Scott Kelly with the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko.
Kelly and Kornienko this week passed the halfway point of a planned year-long stay in space the longest tour of duty in the station's 15-year history.
NASA and Russia are using the year-long mission to get better insight into how microgravity affects human physical and mental health and what countermeasures may mitigate any harmful effects.



Arab News

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.



Search