3 astronauts leave the ISS

Russian spacecraft brought three astronauts on the International Space Station safely to the earth yesterday after working on the universe for 5 months.

Picture 1 of 3 astronauts leave the ISS

RIA Novosti said that Soyuz TMA-21 and two Russian astronauts and an American astronaut landed in an area of ​​Kazakhstan at 8 am today in Russia time (11am Vietnamese time).

The flight was supposed to take place on September 8, but the Progress ship's explosion on August 24 made the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roskomos) decide to postpone the flight.

17 aircraft (including 14 helicopters) and 7 rescue vehicles deployed near the landing point of the ship to search for landing compartments after it lands.

Three astronauts returned today working on ISS for 5 months. The remaining astronauts, including a Russian, a Japanese and an American, will be brought to Earth on November 12.

The accident on the Aug. 24 transporter forced Roskomos to postpone any human flights to ISS until they fixed the cause of the accident. The US Aerospace Agency (NASA) worries that if Russia does not launch ships to send people to ISS in the next two months, ISS will fall into the first-person situation for a decade.