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Soyuz TMA-10 has landed!
Soyuz TMA-10 has landed! Landing confirmed at 6:36 p.m. (Malaysia time).
Recovery crews are on the ground near the Soyuz. The spacecraft landed nearly upright and the crew is safe.
Soon after entering the atmosphere, the crew notified mission managers in Russia that they had entered a ballistic descent for unexplained reasons, which caused the spacecraft to land short of its intended target.
Plunging back to Earth from west to east over central Kazakhstan, the flight plan called for a landing near the town of Arkalyk. But for reasons yet to be explained, the Soyuz flew a steeper-than-planned trajectory and landed short of the intended touchdown point, subjecting the crew to higher-than-normal braking forces. It was the first "ballistic" re-entry since the Soyuz TMA-1 spacecraft returned on May 3, 2003, with the space station's sixth full time crew.
According to mission managers, Soyuz TMA-10 landed approximately 340 kilometers (211 miles) west of the town of Arkalyk, where the recovery crews had been staged. There was no live television coverage of the landing. But NASA commentator Rob Navias, monitoring the re-entry from the Johnson Space Center's mission control in Houston, said Russian recovery forces aboard search aircraft spotted the capsule as it descended under its main parachutes at an altitude of about 5,000 feet. Russian flight controllers said recovery crews contacted the cosmonauts during the final moments of the descent and were told the crew was in good shape.
All three crew members are now out of the vehicle and are being tended to by medical teams. The crew will be flown by helicopter to Kustanai, Kazakhstan, to meet up with other recovery personnel, before returning to Star City, Russia.
Final 4 - astronaut in the making
Candidates for space programme to undergo further assessment
By STAR Online
PETALING JAYA: Malaysians are another step closer to knowing who their first astronaut will be after the final four were announced yesterday.
The four are Malaysia Airlines pilot Mohammed Faiz Kamaluddin, Hospital Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia medical officer Dr Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, Royal Malaysian Armed Forces dental surgeon Faiz Khaleed and senior quality engineer S. Vanajah. Their names were announced by Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak at a simple ceremony at the Subang RMAF airbase here yesterday.
The four will be leaving for Moscow for further assessment by the Russians in the next three weeks.
Najib said they would be going to the Russian Space Agency in Star City, Moscow, where they would be put through a comprehensive medical test.
The select panel will receive input from the Russian technical evaluation committee before picking the last two candidates to undergo an 18-month training programme at the Russian Space Agency.
Najib also said that the programme was financed under a value-offset programme for the purchase of Sukhoi SU 30 MK fighter jets from Russia.
“The Government did not have to come out with any sen to pay for the programme,” he said.
“It will be funded by the Russians and the figure for this entire programme is expected to be RM80mil, but there is no hard cash involved here.”