A Russian Soyuz space
capsule carrying three astronauts who had spent a half-year aboard the
International Space Station landed Wednesday in the steppes of Kazakhstan.
The
landing occurred on schedule with the capsule descending under a white
parachute. It had undocked from the orbiting laboratory some 260 miles (418
kilometers) above the Earth about three hours earlier.
Russian
Mikhail Tyurin, American Rick Mastracchio and Koichi Wakata of Japan had spent
188 days in space.
They
were pulled from the hatch at the top of the capsule and maneuvered down a
slide into lounge chairs set up nearby and given brief medical assessments as
they readjusted to gravity after six months of weightlessness. All appeared to
be in good condition and Tyurin was heard joking that he'd like some red wine.
Russians
Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev and American Steve Swanson remain aboard
the station. Three more astronauts are to launch for the station on May 28.
The
landing came less than a day after Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin
said Russia wouldn't continue cooperating with the United States on the
15-nation ISS past 2020, as NASA had hoped. The United States has relied on
Russian Soyuz capsules to fly to and from the space station since NASA retired
its space shuttle fleet. NASA hopes that private companies such as Space X will
be able to develop rockets and capsules to fly astronauts to the space station
within a few years.
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