Latest Soyuz capsule leak prompts Russians to plan possible rescue of space station crew | Void

Russia is considering a “rescue” plan to send an empty spacecraft to the International Space Station (ISS) to bring back three crew members who were stranded after their Soyuz crew capsule. Leak jumped while moored to the outpost.

Roscosmos and NASA officials said in a Press Conference On Thursday, they were continuing to investigate how the coolant line in the capsule’s external radiator sustained a small hole last week, just as two astronauts were preparing for a routine spacewalk.

The vehicle, known as MS-22, began spraying coolant into space on December 14, with Dramatic images for NASA TV White snowflake-like particles appear streaming from behind.

Sergey Krikalev, who leads human spaceflight programs at Russia’s Roscosmos, said damage assessments were being conducted.

No final decision has been made on the exact means of returning the capsule’s crew members to Earth—whether by launching another Soyuz to retrieve them or by the less likely option of sending them home in the leaking capsule without most of the coolant.

If thermal analysis—which assesses the air temperature inside the cabin—concludes that MS-22 is not suitable for manned flight, the launch of another Soyuz capsule scheduled for mid-March from Baikonur Cosmodrome could be moved and launched upwards. Krikalev said.

“They are looking forward to late February to send up the next Soyuz,” added Joel Montalbano, ISS program manager at the US space agency, who was also on the call.

If so, the damaged spaceship would return to Earth without a crew.

This is not the first Soyuz leak. In 2018 Unity Air leak jumped, which Roscosmos said may have been sabotage. The astronauts used tape to seal the leak after it caused a small loss of pressure that wasn’t life-threatening.

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NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, right, with Russian Space Agency cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petlin before heading to the International Space Station earlier this year. Photo: Dmitry Lovetsky/The Associated Press

MS-22 flew Russian cosmonauts Dmitry Petlin and Sergey Prokopyev, as well as NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, to the International Space Station in September.

There are currently seven people aboard the orbital outpost, but if MS-22 is deemed inoperable, that also means the ISS has only one “lifeboat” capable of carrying four people, in case it needs to be evacuated.

Americans Josh Cassada and Nicole Mann, Japanese Koichi Wakata and Russian Anna Kikina arrived aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon in October.

Montalbano said the cause of the damage remains unclear. But it didn’t seem as though the Geminid meteor shower—an annual phenomenon—was responsible, as the structure was breached from a different direction.

“Both the track team in Houston and the track team in Moscow confirmed it wasn’t a meteor shower,” Montalbano said.

He added that more work is still needed to determine whether it was caused by naturally occurring micrometeorites, man-made debris in orbit, or hardware failure.

The head of Roskosmos, Yuri Borisov, confirmed this The officials did not fear the safety of the crew In a live broadcast on Russia 24 TV channel, Wed.

“temperature [on the Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft] It has stabilized and has not exceeded 30 degrees Celsius recently. Today, we have no worries, primarily about the lives of the crew on the International Space Station. “The temperature stabilized after we brought air ducts there from the Russian part and maintained the temperature regime with ventilators.”

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On Thursday, a spacewalk took place to update the station’s solar arrays, which were postponed on Wednesday.

Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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