AIRLIVEAIRLIVE
  • News
  • Emergency
  • Reports
  • Military
  • Space
  • LivestreamsACTIVE
  • Webcams
  • Store
    • My Account
    • Order tracking
    • AvGeek clothing
    • Models
    • Keychains
    • T-shirts
    • Toys
    • Boeing
    • Airbus
    • Hat
    • Space
4
  • × Airbus A350XWB Black Cap 1 × $34.90
  • × Boeing Black Cap 1 × $34.90
  • × Building bricks Supermarine Spitfire 1 × $29.90
  • × Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit keychain 1 × $5.90

Subtotal: $105.60

View cartCheckout

Notification Show More
AIRLIVEAIRLIVE
Search
  • News
  • Emergency
  • Reports
  • Military
  • Space
  • LivestreamsACTIVE
  • Webcams
  • Store
    • My Account
    • Order tracking
    • AvGeek clothing
    • Models
    • Keychains
    • T-shirts
    • Toys
    • Boeing
    • Airbus
    • Hat
    • Space
Follow US
AIRLIVE Aviation news network
Space

Russian cosmonauts’ spacewalk aborted after a leak was discovered on the Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft

Last updated: December 16, 2022 14:11
Published 2 years ago Category: Space Author: AIRLIVE
SHARE

Engineers from Russia and the US are investigating a coolant leak on the Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft, which is docked at the International Space Station.

A planned spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts has been called off after ground teams noticed a significant leak from one of the spacecraft docked at the orbiting International Space Station.

The leak originated from the Russian Soyuz spacecraft, spewing a liquid into space for several hours. NASA later said the liquid was coolant.

Problem with Soyuz MS-22 on the ISS right now! pic.twitter.com/V4Ymvnn2D1

— Chris Bergin – NSF (@NASASpaceflight) December 15, 2022

During their spacewalk, cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin were scheduled to move a radiator from an older Russian module to a newer science module that arrived at the station last summer. The spacewalk was called off at the last minute — while the duo were suited up and in the space station’s airlock — after ground teams discovered the leak.

The leaking Soyuz capsule transported the two Russian cosmonauts scheduled for the spacewalk, along with U.S. astronaut Frank Rubio, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Sept. 21.

Ground teams at NASA in Houston and at Roscosmos in Moscow are evaluating the potential impacts on the integrity of the Soyuz spacecraft, which is also responsible for bringing them home. The trio is scheduled to return in the capsule in late March.

A micrometeorite is suspected.

LATEST NEWS

BREAKING For the first time, Russia launched an intercontinental ballistic missile on Ukraine
Military 13 minutes ago
Air Canada #AC50 from Montréal to New Delhi just diverted to Frankfurt
News 1 hour ago Air Canada Boeing 787-9 AC AC50 C-FVLX FRA
British Airways flight is declaring an emergency inbound London Heathrow
Emergency 2 hours ago
LIVE Very strong cross wind reported at Rome FCO Airport
News 20 hours ago FCO
North runway at Vancouver International Airport likely to be closed for 48 hours
Emergency 1 day ago Prime Air Boeing 767-338ER freighter C-GAZI YVR
First Officer of ‘Miracle on the Hudson’ retires from American Airlines on flight from London to Chicago
News 2 days ago American Airlines AA AA87 ORD

Related news

Space

Watch SpaceX’s fifth Starship launch with an attempt to catch the booster

1 month ago
Space

Watch first private spacewalk as Polaris Dawn crew is about to perform EVA

2 months ago
Space

Watch SpaceX’s launch of the first commercial mission with spacewalk

2 months ago
Space

After 24 years in space, an ESA’s satellite is reentering Earth’s atmosphere today

3 months ago

AIRLIVE.net is supported by a team of aviation enthusiasts.

All data and information provided on this site is for informational purposes only. AIRLIVE.net makes no representations as to accuracy, completeness, currentness, suitability or validity of any information on this site and will not be liable for any errors or omissions.

AIRLIVEAIRLIVE
Follow US
Copyright AIRLIVE
  • Contact
  • Submit a story
  • Cookie policy
  • Privacy policy
  • Return policy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?