Russian spacewalk cut short: ‘Drop everything and go back inside’

Oleg Artemiev ©AFP

Oleg Artemiev had just reported anomalies in the data showing him the voltage of his spacesuit.

“Oleg, you must return to the airlock as soon as possible”, he was asked repeatedly, according to the words of the Russian employees in direct contact with the cosmonauts, translated into English on the video broadcast of the exit by NASA.

“Please don’t worry, it’s fine,” he was also told, however.

“Me? Worried? Never in life,” replied Oleg Artemiev, once more according to the NASA translator.

“The situation is under control”

The cosmonaut joined the airlock, where he directly connected to the current of the ISS.

He then waited for the second cosmonaut, Denis Matveev, to retrieve the equipment that was used during the exit and also to enter the airlock, which was then closed in order to be repressurized.

The spacewalk was declared complete following four hours.

“The situation is under control (…). The cosmonaut’s health is not threatened,” the Russian space agency Roscosmos said in a statement. “The crew is doing well.”

“The duo were not in danger at any time during the operations,” NASA also said in a blog post.

This was the seventh spacewalk for Oleg Artemiev and the third for Denis Matveev.

Prior to the incident, they were able to install two cameras outside the Station. “The works that have not been completed will be carried out in the next outings,” Roscosmos said.

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Alexandra Hartman Editor-in-Chief

Editor-in-Chief Prize-winning journalist with over 20 years of international news experience. Alexandra leads the editorial team, ensuring every story meets the highest standards of accuracy and journalistic integrity.

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