Home>News Center>World
         
 

Capsule carrying three-man crew returns
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-04-25 07:50

A space capsule carrying a U.S.-Russian-Italian crew landed safely on the steppes of northern Kazakhstan early Monday, following a mission aboard the international space station.

Search-and-rescue helicopters spotted the Russian TMA-5 capsule as it floated toward its designated arrival site about 50 miles north of the Kazakh town of Arkalyk and made a soft landing, upright. It had undocked with the orbiting station less than 3 1/2 hours earlier.

Italian ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori, left, Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov, center, and American NASA astronaut Leroy Chao shake hands shortly upon their arrival to the town of Arkalyk, northern Kazakhstan, early Monday, April 25, 2005. Chao and Sharipov returned to earth after a half-year stint on the International Space Station while Vittory spent 10 days at the station after arriving with a replacement crew. (AP
Italian ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori, left, Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov, center, and American NASA astronaut Leroy Chao shake hands shortly upon their arrival to the town of Arkalyk, northern Kazakhstan, early Monday, April 25, 2005. Chao and Sharipov returned to earth after a half-year stint on the International Space Station while Vittory spent 10 days at the station after arriving with a replacement crew. [AP]
Space officials and medical staff traveled to the landing site to welcome American Leroy Chiao, Russian Salizhan Sharipov and Italian Roberto Vittori.

Mission Control said Sharipov had reported that the crew were feeling fine.

Vittori, a European Space Agency astronaut, had spent eight days on the station, while Sharipov and Chiao have been on the orbiting lab since October.

Russian ground personal members and doctors carry Italian ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori to the medical tent upon his arrival to the town of Arkalyk, northern Kazakhstan, early Monday, April 25, 2005. American NASA astronaut Leroy Chao and Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov safely landed to earth after a half-year stint on the International Space Station while Italian ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori spent 10 days at the station after arriving with replacement crew. (AP
Russian ground personal members and doctors carry Italian ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori to the medical tent upon his arrival to the town of Arkalyk, northern Kazakhstan, early Monday, April 25, 2005. [AP]
Remaining behind on the station were Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev and American astronaut John Phillips, whose six-month mission is slated to include welcoming the first U.S. space shuttle flight since the Columbia shuttle disaster two years ago.

Russia's space program has been the only way of getting astronauts to the station since the Columbia disintegrated as it returned to Earth on Feb. 1, 2003, sparking a suspension of shuttle flights. The U.S. space agency NASA is hoping to renew shuttle flights sometime next month.

Mission Control spokesman Valery Lyndin said that even after the shuttle resumes flying, Russian Soyuz spacecraft will continue to travel to and from the station about twice a year because they will serve as escape vehicles.

The TMA-5 undocked at 10:44 p.m. Moscow time and entered the atmosphere about three hours later. Its parachute opened 15 minutes before the scheduled landing time.

Russian space officials had hoped to avoid a repeat of the May 2003 return to Earth by the space station crew, when the Soyuz capsule went some 250 miles off course due to a computer error, prompting a frantic search over the steppes.

Russian helicopters and planes had been on call, along with a U.S. medical team, near Arkalyk. Engineers followed the capsule's journey through space on a map projected on a large screen at Russian Mission Control in Korolyov, outside Moscow, and periodically communicated with the crew.

The ITAR-Tass news agency quoted Maj. Gen. Vladimir Popov, the head of the Russian Defense Ministry's Space Search and Rescue Department, as saying that Monday's landing could have been complicated by melted snow on the steppes.

"The soil is very moist in the landing zone," Popov was quoted as saying.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Officials react angrily to US moves on yuan

 

   
 

Legislators examine motion on HK chief

 

   
 

Jurors to help decide court verdicts

 

   
 

Jilin coal mine flooding traps 69 men

 

   
 

Leaders relive Bandung Spirit in walk

 

   
 

Law to ensure safer securities market ahead

 

   
  Leaders relive Bandung Spirit in walk
   
  Four car bombings in Iraq leave 21 dead
   
  Official: Iran to resume nuke enrichment
   
  Syria dnding military presence in Lebanon
   
  Capsule carrying three-man crew returns
   
  U.S. prison population soars in 2003, '04
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Russia's Soyuz docks at space station
   
U.S.-Russian crew blasts off to space station
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement