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On Thursday, Nasa’s Crew-3 mission successfully returned to Earth safely in a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft after six months aboard the International Space Station.
The mission was launched on November 10, 2021, on a Falcon 9 rocket from the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The Endurance crew includes Tom Marshburn, 61, an American spaceflight veteran, and three first-time astronauts: NASA’s Raja Chari, 44 and Kayla Barron, 34, and their ESA colleague Matthias Maurer, 52.
They spent 177 days in orbit and which is NASA’s third long-duration commercial crew mission. Barron, Chari, Marshburn, and Maurer traveled 75,060,792 miles during their mission, spent 175 days aboard the space station, and completed 2,832 orbits around Earth.
The splashdown, at about 12:45 am local time (04:45 GMT) on Friday, was carried live by a joint NASA-SpaceX webcast.
The 23.5-hour journey back should see them splashing down underneath parachutes off in the Gulf of Mexico coast of Florida at 12:43 am on May 6.
They left behind the one Italian and three American astronauts of Crew-4, and three Russian cosmonauts. Ahead of departure, Marshburn handed command of the station over to Russian Oleg Artemyev.
NASA and SpaceX both shared videos and photos of the Dragon capsule descending through the Earth’s atmosphere after the parachutes were deployed. Also shared some of the moments after the astronauts were rescued from their space capsule.
Crew-3 carried out several scientific experiments, including growing chiles in space to add to the knowledge of cultivating crops on long-term missions, exploring how concrete hardens in space, and Earth monitoring during those months there.
Now with the return of the Crew-3 flight, a part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Programme, its sign beginning of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-4 launch, which docked to the station on April 27.
Ghada Ashour, who grew up in Gaza, becomes fifth scholar selected for FIA’s flagship scholarship initiative Dubai, UAE, 8th December, 2025: The FIA’s United Against Online Abuse (UAOA) Campaign has welcomed Ghada Ashour, a 24-year-old student from Palestine, to its flagship scholarship programme, created to empower the next generation of researchers in the fight against online abuse in sport. Ghada grew up in Gaza where she has been studying remotely until gaining her place on the UAOA scholarship, which brought her to Dublin City University (DCU), Ireland. Becoming the fifth scholar to join the scholarship, she was selected based on her interests in social media, and her strong passion for advancing insights in this area for the benefit of everyone participating in sport. Launched in 2023, the programme offers talented students and young professionals from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to engage in cutting-edge research on the impact, prevalence, and prevention of online abuse in sport with a focus on developing practical solutions. Funded by the FIA Foundation, the UAOA scholars have been selected to undertake invaluable research at DCU based on their project proposals, dedication to achieving positive social change, and their unique perspectives approaching this issue. Ghada’s thesis, which will be printed in English and translated into Arabic, will focus specifically on the …
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