Skip to main content

U.S. astronaut, Russian cosmonauts arrive on Earth

By Chelsea J. Carter and Andy Rose, CNN
updated 10:44 AM EDT, Sat March 16, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NASA: The Soyuz spacecraft has returned to Earth from the International Space Station
  • One American and two Russians will land just before midnight
  • Russian Soyuz space modules have proven very reliable
  • It is the standard transportation mode to the ISS after a deadly space shuttle crash

(CNN) -- The Soyuz capsule returned Friday night landing in northeast Kazakhstan bringing an American astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts back from a journey to the International Space Station, NASA said.

The vessel capsule needed less than three and a half hours to descend to Earth.

The return, initially scheduled for Thursday, was postponed because of inclement weather at the landing site northeast of the Russian town of Arkalyk, NASA said.

The American expedition commander, Kevin Ford, and Russian Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Evgeny Tarelkin spent 142 days on the station after launching into space on October 23, 2012.

Kevin Ford on space mission with Russia

The crew members spent their unexpected extra day in space reviewing undocking and landing procedures as well as working with the remaining crew members on the handover of duties, NASA said.

Ford passed the helm of the space station to Chris Hadfield of the Canadian Space Agency. Hadfield and his crewmates, U.S. astronaut Tom Marshburn and Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, will oversee the space station until the arrival of the next crew in two weeks, according to NASA.

The journey up to the station takes longer than the return trip to Earth, NASA said. The Soyuz needs a total of two days to catch up with the ISS in its orbit.

NASA TV planned to broadcast the undocking and landing live.

More space and science news on CNN's Light Years blog

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
updated 6:54 AM EDT, Tue May 14, 2013
Chris Hadfield has conquered space. Now he's conquering the Internet, too.
updated 8:48 AM EDT, Sun April 21, 2013
In the midst of chaos here on Earth, scientists are finding hope for life on other planets.
updated 6:05 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2013
The future of NASA's planet-hunting Kepler space observatory was in question after a part that helps aim the spacecraft stopped working.
updated 11:11 AM EDT, Sun April 21, 2013
What do you do with 6,000 tons of space junk traveling at thousands of miles an hour? Harpoon it of course.
updated 12:14 PM EDT, Thu April 11, 2013
NASA plans to capture an asteroid and start sending astronauts aloft again by 2017, even with a tighter budget.
updated 6:48 AM EDT, Fri April 5, 2013
This image from the Hubble Space Telescope indicates that a huge ring of dark matter likely exists surrounding the center of CL0024+17 that has no normal matter counterpart.
A giant particle physics detector has provided its first results in the search for the mysterious "dark matter" believed to be a major component of the universe.
updated 9:40 AM EDT, Fri March 29, 2013
In six hours, a person might walk 18 or so miles. By car, it could be 350-plus miles. A commercial airplane might get as far as 3,400 miles.
updated 3:30 PM EDT, Thu March 21, 2013
How cute was our universe as a baby? We now know better than ever: The picture of our early universe just got sharper and tells scientists with greater precision many important facts about how the universe evolved.
updated 10:17 AM EDT, Sat March 16, 2013
Stargazers in North America were delighted to see a highly anticipated comet make an appearance in the March sky.
updated 10:18 AM EDT, Sat March 16, 2013
Breathtaking blossoms nearly the size of our solar system are strewn across the universe -- hundreds of thousands of them. Quasars are, at the same time, among the most fiery monsters.
updated 12:22 PM EDT, Wed March 13, 2013
Curiosity, humanity's most powerful rover to land on Mars, has made a startling discovery: Conditions that could have supported life once existed there.
updated 9:46 AM EST, Sat March 2, 2013
First a meteor exploded over Russia, followed closely by an asteroid fly-by. Now, two comets are expected to put on a naked-eye spectacle for sky watchers in the Northern Hemisphere.
updated 9:48 AM EST, Tue March 5, 2013
One man. One woman. Five hundred and one days in an RV-size space capsule. Will they still be speaking when they return?
ADVERTISEMENT