The space station breathes a sigh of relief
The International Space Station is no longer in survival mode. This Saturday four new astronauts arrived to replace the team that had to return early due to a serious health problem. SpaceX delivered them right on time.
An evacuation that marked history
What happened last month was something not seen since the time of Yuri Gagarin. NASA’s first medical evacuation in 65 years of manned flights. An astronaut became seriously ill up there, 446 kilometers high, and the whole plan fell apart.
“NASA has refused to reveal the identity of the astronaut who fell ill in orbit on January 7 or explain what happened”
Three companions had to accompany him back, leaving the station with just one American and two Russians keeping the lights on. Space walks were suspended. Scientific research was curtailed. The clock was ticking.
The new guardians of space
Now comes the replacement: Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway from NASA, Sophie Adenot from France, and the Russian Andrei Fedyaev. They will stay between eight and nine months trying to make up for lost time.
Meir already knows the neighborhood – in 2019 she made history with the first all-female spacewalk. Fedyaev is also a veteran of the place. Adenot is only the second French woman to make it this far, and she celebrated with a joyous “Bonjour!” when his capsule docked.
“Let’s get to work,” said Meir when they were finally able to hug their new colleagues.
The curious thing is what we don’t know. NASA is silent on what exactly happened to that astronaut, although they did confirm that he spent his first Earth night in a hospital before returning to Houston.
The only thing clear is that the medical reviews for the replacements did not change. Space remains hostile territory, but the mission continues.




