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Empty Space Station? NASA Prepares for the Worst (but Hopes for the Best) After Soyuz Abort


Empty Space Station? NASA Prepares for the Worst (but Hopes for the Best) After Soyuz Abort A few months from now, the International Space Station (ISS) could be unoccupied for the first time in nearly two decades. Russia's workhorse Soyuz rocket suffered a serious anomaly just minutes after launching two astronauts toward the ISS today (Oct. 11), forcing the spaceflyers' crew craft to make an emergency landing in Kazakhstan. Those two explorers — NASA's Nick Hague and cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin — made it through the bumpy touchdown just fine and are in good condition, NASA officials said. But the Soyuz will be grounded while Russian investigators try to figure out exactly what happened today, and how to prevent it from occurring again.   More



(Source: Space.com - Oct 14)

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