1st Korean Astronaut Recounts Scary Return
Says She Was "Really Scared" During Space Capsule's Unexpectedly Steep Descent To Earth
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South Korea's first astronaut Yi So-yeon looks on during a news conference in Star City, outside Moscow, Monday, April 21, 2008. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)
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"During descent I saw some kind of fire outside as we were going through the atmosphere," said Yi So-yeon, a 29-year-old bioengineer. "At first I was really scared because it looked really, really hot and I thought we could burn."
But then she said she noticed it was not even warm inside the Soyuz capsule. "I looked at the others and I pretended to be OK," Yi said.
The steeper-than-usual descent from the international space station subjected Yi, American astronaut Peggy Whitson and Russian flight engineer Yuri Malenchenko to severe gravitational forces during the re-entry Saturday.
The technical glitch also sent the TMA-11 craft off-course and it landed about 260 miles from its target on Kazakhstan's barren steppe.
All three members of the crew walked slowly and were unsteady on their feet Monday when arriving for the news conference at Russia's Star City cosmonaut training center outside Moscow.
Malenchenko said it was not yet clear what caused the unusual descent.
"There was no action of the crew that led to this," he said. "Time will tell what went wrong."
It was the second time in a row - and the third since 2003 - that the Soyuz landing had gone awry.
Officials said the craft followed a so-called "ballistic re-entry" - a very steep trajectory that subjects the crew to extreme physical force. Mission Control spokesman Valery Lyndin said the crew had experienced gravitational forces up to 10 times those on Earth during the 3 1/2-hour descent.
Yi traveled to the international space station on April 10, along with cosmonauts Sergei Volkov and Oleg Kononenko, who have replaced Whitson and Malenchenko. South Korea paid Russia $20 million for Yi's flight.
Whitson and Malenchenko spent roughly six months performing experiments and maintaining the orbiting station and were replaced by Volkov and Kononenko. They joined American astronaut Garrett Reisman, who arrived last month on the U.S. space shuttle Endeavour.
According to NASA, Whitson, 48, set a new American record for cumulative time in space - 377 days.
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- "It is pretty freakin'''' scary that they would try this again for the third time when the last two times were a failure." Posted by Canadawitch6 at 12:49 PM : Apr 22, 2008
I agree.
It is nice to have a second one to fall back on. - Reply to this comment
- "It was the second time in a row - and the third since 2003 - that the Soyuz landing had gone awry."
It is pretty freakin'' scary that they would try this again for the third time when the last two times were a failure.:) - Reply to this comment
"During descent I saw some kind of fire outside as we
were going through the atmosphere," said Yi So-yeon
What! Fire in the atmosphere?
Where did this korean mama get her training?
Gee, she should file a report to the U.N.
"I see many fiea in sky, I be sooo skeid pweeze investeegate."- Reply to this comment
- What needs to happen now is for the South Korean woman to tour North Korea. Surely this will help show some of the benefits of opening that country up to the outside world.
- Reply to this comment
- Once again we have armchair astronauts, know-it-alls who, without any experience or knowledge whatsoever of the situation, tell others how things should be.
FYI: It''s OK to feel fear in an unexpected situation. To pretend otherwise is a lie. It''s how to comport yourself in such a situation, and from the story this astronaut comported herself very well. - Reply to this comment
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