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NASA's oldest astronaut felt the decades melt away in space before returning on his 70th birthday

NASA's oldest astronaut felt the decades melt away in space before returning on his 70th birthday

New York Post29-04-2025
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Fresh from space, NASA's oldest full-time astronaut said Monday that weightlessness made him feel decades younger, with everyday aches and pains vanishing.
Don Pettit marked his 70th birthday on April 20 by plunging through the atmosphere in a Russian Soyuz capsule to wrap up a seven-month mission at the International Space Station.
In his first public remarks since touchdown, Pettit said he threw up all over the Kazak steppes upon touchdown, the result of feeling gravity for the first time in 220 days.
6 NASA astronaut Don Pettit getting carried to a medical tent after he and other crew members landed the Soyuz MS-26 spacecraft near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan on April 20, 2025.
Bill Ingalls/NASA via AP
6 Pettit boarding a plane to travel back to Houston.
NASA/Bill Ingalls
Returning to Earth has always been 'a significant challenge' for his body, Pettit said from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.
'I didn't look too good because I didn't feel too good,' he said, adding that his body's normal 'creaks and groans' returned.
In weightlessness, on the other hand, Pettit felt the decades melt away.
'It makes me feel like I'm 30 years old again,' said Pettit, an astronaut since 1996 who ventured to space four times. 'All that kind of stuff heals up because you're sleeping, you're just floating and your body, all these little aches and pains and everything heal up.'
6 Pettit, 70, is NASA's oldest astronaut.
NASA / SWNS
6 Pettit seen aboard the International Space Station in 2024.
NASA / SWNS
Mercury astronaut John Glenn was 77 when he returned to orbit on a short shuttle flight in 1998. But he'd been gone from NASA for decades and was close to wrapping up his Senate career.
Even a pair of 90-year-olds have flown to space, but only on 10-minute up-and-down hops by Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket company.
Pettit, an engineer who still feels 'like a little kid inside,' focused on his astrophotography while at the space station, capturing auroras, comets and satellites streaking off in the distance.
6 The Soyuz MS-26 space capsule carrying the ISS crew descending back to Earth on April 20, 2025.
via REUTERS
6 The Soyuz MS-26 space capsule landing in Kazakhstan.
via REUTERS
He also conducted a slew of physics experiments in his spare time, like blowing and stacking bubbles, and forming a perfect ball of honey on a spoon with peanut butter, in order to share the experience with others.
'I've got a few more good years left,' Pettit said. 'I could see getting another flight or two in before I'm ready to hang up my rocket nozzles.'
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Russian Volcano Erupts for the First Time in 600 Years
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Russian Volcano Erupts for the First Time in 600 Years

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Russia's remote Krasheninnikov volcano, dormant for roughly 600 years, erupted overnight in Kamchatka peninsula in the country's far east, just days after a powerful 8.8 magnitude earthquake struck the region. The eruption generated an ash plume rising approximately 6,000 meters (nearly 20,000 feet) into the sky, the Kamchatka branch of Russia's Ministry for Emergency Services said, as per Reuters. The volcano itself stands at 1,856 meters. Newsweek contacted several volcanologists for comment on Sunday via email. Why It Matters This eruption marks the first documented activity at Krasheninnikov since around 1463, according to experts, making it a geologically significant event. 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