With the Soyuz leak investigation still underway, the ISS crew was
gearing up for the arrival of two new roommates — NASA astronaut Nick
Hague and Russian cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin — when their next big
nightmare happened. A couple minutes after the duo lifted off in their
Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft, the Soyuz rocket failed and
triggered the emergency abort system. The launch failure sent the crew capsule falling ballistically toward Earth.
Hague and Ovchinin survived the emergency landing. Unfortunately, the
incident left the ISS short two crewmembers, which meant that there
would be fewer hands on deck to work on the hundreds of science
experiments going on at the orbiting lab.
The crew was short-handed for about seven weeks, until the next crewed Soyuz mission arrived, with NASA astronaut Anne McClain, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko and Canadian Space Agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques.
While the crew of the Soyuz MS-09 had to endure some stressful
experiences in orbit, their mission also had its highlights. Gerst
turned out to be an avid photographer during his time in space,
capturing some spectacular photos and videos while in orbit. His
space-photography portfolio now includes some
amazing auroras, multiple hurricanes and even rockets launching into space.
Prokopyev successfully completed two spacewalks with his Russian
crewmembers. During his first spacewalk, in August, he and Oleg Artemyev
tossed small satellites into orbit and installed some science equipment
outside the station. Then, on Dec. 3, Prokopyev went back outside the
station, this time with Kononenko, to inspect the patched-up Soyuz hole —
a process that involved dramatically
stabbing the spacecraft with a large space knife.
During Expedition 56/57, the International Space Station received a
total of six cargo shipments packed not only with science experiments,
but also with plenty of goodies like ice cream and the "world's strongest coffee." The most recent delivery, a SpaceX Dragon capsule, brought along some Christmas goodies,
too. Another SpaceX Dragon, which arrived at the ISS shortly after the
MS-09, brought along a special artificial-intelligence robot called
CIMON,
which is short for "Crew Interactive Mobile Companion." Gerst had the
privilege of being the first person to talk to CIMON in space.
As per protocol, the astronauts on these missions got to take most
holidays off from work to relax, phone their families and participate in
traditional holiday activities, like eating turkey on Thanksgiving,
putting an elf on the shelf before Christmas and even dressing up like Darth Vader for Halloween. Now that the crew is back on the ground, they'll spend the holidays like Earthlings again.
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