
Astronaut lands at Scottish airport hours after return to Earth
Roscosmos said the parachute-assisted landing on the Kazakh steppe near the city of Zhezkazgan was a trouble-free descent.
The three men returned after spending 220 days in space and orbiting the Earth 3,520 times, NASA said in a statement.
READ MORE:
Fast-growing airline provides lift as it lands at Scottish airport
Space travel should not be just for the super-wealthy
Scotland's space sector gets into position
The agency noted that, coincidentally, Mr Pettit celebrated his 70th birthday on Sunday.
Nasa said it followed its routine postlanding medical checks, before the crew returned to the recovery staging area in Karaganda, Kazakhstan.
Pettit then boarded a NASA plane bound for Nasa's Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas, while Roscosmos said Ovchinin and Vagner departed for a training base in Star City, Russia.
Flight tracking data showed that the plane carrying Mr Pettit - NASA5 - landed at Glasgow Prestwick Airport at around 4:15pm on Sunday after a seven-hour 50 minute flight from Karaganda, Kazakhstan.
NASA5 - N95NA - AD337B
NASA Gulfstream V en route to Prestwick from Karaganda, Kazakhstan. pic.twitter.com/n5miQCIyth — Pierre Davide Borrelli (@PierreDavideB) April 20, 2025
The plane - a Gulfstream V jet - then departed Prestwick at around 6:35pm on Sunday bound for Houston, where it landed at around 10pm local time after a nine-hour 20 minute flight.
NASA5 is used for both space missions and Earth science research, often in remote locations. The aircraft is a long-range business jet that supports various NASA programmes, including the International Space Station (ISS) Program and the NASA Earth Sciences Division (ESD).
In 2018, NASA astronauts Joe Acaba and Mark Vande Hei also touched down at Prestwick from Kazakhstan en route to Houston.
The pair had spent After 168 days aboard the International Space Station and before returning to Earth alongside Russian cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin.
Since NASA ended its space shuttle program in 2011, American astronauts have been hitching a ride with Russian cosmonauts to get to the International Space Station and back again.
The space station has been continuously occupied since November 2000. An international crew of seven people live and work while traveling at a speed of five miles per second, orbiting Earth about every 90 minutes. Sometimes more are aboard the station during a crew handover.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
7 hours ago
- Reuters
NASA says no decision yet on whether next Boeing Starliner flight will carry crew
WASHINGTON, June 6 (Reuters) - The earliest Boeing's Starliner spacecraft could fly again is early 2026, NASA said on Friday, as it evaluates whether to put humans on board one year after propulsion system issues on the capsule forced its debut crew to stay on the International Space Station for roughly nine months.


NBC News
15 hours ago
- NBC News
These cosmic monsters are creating the biggest explosions since the big bang
The vast emptiness of space is growing emptier one star at a time. That's because 80 billion lightyears from Earth, three cosmic beasts are devouring stars ten times the size of the sun. In a new study by the University of Hawaii, among others, astronomers scouring through NASA and European Space Agency's data said they had discovered three supermassive black holes. Those behemoths feast on stars of such a size that make the one at the center of the solar system look like a light snack. The explosions those scientists have recorded, which happened when those black holes shredded and sucked up the fabric of those stars, are the largest since the big bang that created the universe. 'What I think is so exciting about this work is that we're pushing the upper bounds of what we understand to be the most energetic environments of the universe,' Anna Payne, a staff scientist at the Space Telescope Science Institute and a co-author of the study, said in the NASA article. Black holes are astronomical objects invisible to the human eye. They have a gravitational pull so strong that they swallow everything, including light. A supermassive black hole is the biggest of all black holes, sitting at the center of galaxies like the one at the heart of the Milky Way slowly sucking planets and all other matter toward it. When a star gets trapped in the pull of a supermassive black hole, it can disintegrate with a spectacular explosion in a cosmic event that scientists in a new study published this week in the journal Science Advances call 'extreme nuclear transient.' 'These events are the only way we can have a spotlight that we can shine on otherwise inactive massive black holes,' University of Hawaii graduate student Jason Hinkle said in a separate NASA article. Hinkle is the lead author of the new study that describes for the first time two such events that took place over the past decade. Two of the three supermassive black holes were detected in 2016 and 2018 by an ESA mission and are documented for the first time in the study. The third, nicknamed 'Barbie' because of its catalog identifier ZTF20abrbeie, was identified in 2020 by a Caltech observatory in California and subsequently documented in 2023. The blasts are so powerful that the only cosmic event larger in magnitude has been the big bang that sparked the dawn of the universe. Unlike in other stellar explosions, though, the way X-ray, optical light and ultraviolet rays dimmed and brightened in these incidents made it clear this event was a 'black hole ripping a star apart,' the NASA article said. NASA says black holes actually brighten during these cosmic events and that brightness lasts for several months. That brightness has given scientists a new way to find more black holes in the early distant universe. When astronomers peer into space, they are looking back in time because the further away they look, the older the light is reaching them — the light reaching Earth from the sun, for example, is eight minutes old. 'We can take these three objects as a blueprint to know what to look for in the future,' Payne said.


Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The influential Trump advisor who triggered the president's spectacular split with Elon Musk
President Donald Trump 's surprise decision to change Elon Musk 's preferred pick to lead NASA may have done more to fuel the historic blowup between the two men than previously known. The president canceled his nomination of Jared Isaacman as NASA's administrator after Musk officially left the White House on Friday. Isaacman, a billionaire, pilot, and astronaut, was close with Musk and even flew to space with Musk's Dragon program on Operation Polaris Dawn in 2024. But he had a history of donating funds to Democrats, including recent Democratic candidates who ran against GOP senators Tim Sheehy of Montana and Bernie Moreno of Ohio in 2024. Despite his donations, Isaacman was approved by the Senate committee in April and was expected to get confirmed this week in the Senate. But Trump's advisor Sergio Gor, in charge of managing the White House personnel office, reportedly delivered Trump a list of Isaacman's donations to Democrats according to reporting from Axios. Gor did not appreciate Musk's involvement in personnel matters, the report noted, as they had a tense relationship. 'This was Sergio's out-the-door 'f**k you' to Musk,' one White House official said. Trump and Musk spoke about Issacson's record prior to their press conference last Friday. Despite their conversation, Trump pulled Issacson's nomination on Saturday. 'After a thorough review of prior associations, I am hereby withdrawing the nomination of Jared Isaacman to head NASA,' Trump wrote on his Truth Social site. Musk responded to the news with disappointment 'It is rare to find someone so competent and good-hearted,' Musk wrote of Isaacman on X. The president mused Thursday that Musk's personal attacks might have been trigged by his decision. 'I know that disturbed him He wanted and rightfully recommended somebody that I guess he knew very well. I'm sure he respected him, to run NASA. But I didn't think it was appropriate. He happened to be a Democrat, like totally Democrat,' Trump said, adding that the administration had the right to nominate a Republican to the position.