Cape Canaveral (US):For the first time in 20 years, a Russian cosmonaut rocketed from the US on Wednesday, launching to the International Space Station alongside NASA and Japanese astronauts despite tensions over the war in Ukraine. Their SpaceX flight was delayed by Hurricane Ian, which ripped across the state last week.
I hope with this launch we will brighten up the skies over Florida a little bit for everyone, said the Japan Space Agency's Koichi Wakata, who is making his fifth spaceflight. Joining him on a five-month mission are three new to space: Marine Col. Nicole Mann, the first Native American woman to orbit Earth; Navy Capt. Josh Cassada and Russia's lone female cosmonaut, Anna Kikina. Awesome! said Mann as they reached orbit. "That was a smooth ride uphill. You've got three rookies who are pretty happy to be floating in space right now.
They're due to arrive at the space station on Thursday, 29 hours after a noon departure from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre, and won't be back on Earth until March. They're replacing a US-Italian crew that arrived in April. Kikina is the Russian Space Agency's exchange for NASA's Frank Rubio, who launched to the space station two weeks ago from Kazakhstan aboard a Soyuz rocket. He flew up with two cosmonauts. The space agencies agreed over the summer to swap seats on their flights in order to ensure a continuous US and Russian presence aboard the 260-mile-high (420-kilometre-high) outpost.
The barter was authorised even as global hostilities mounted over Russia's invasion of Ukraine in late February. The next crew exchange is in the spring. Shortly before liftoff, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said that the key reason for the seat exchange is safety in case an emergency forces one capsule's crew home, there would still be an American and Russian on board. In the meantime, Russia remains committed to the space station through at least 2024, Russia space official Sergei Krikalev assured reporters this week.