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It Looks Terrifying To Be Inside The Spacecraft That Returns Astronauts To Earth

Dina Spector   

It Looks Terrifying To Be Inside The Spacecraft That Returns Astronauts To Earth
Science1 min read

Souyz

NASA

Astronaut Karen Nyberg, who recently returned from a five-and-a-half-month-stay on the International Space Station (ISS), shared her experience in space during a live talk at NASA headquarters on Monday.

Crew members take the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get both to and back from the ISS, although re-entry is a less comfortable ride, according to Nyberg.

Nyberg shared a short clip looking out the module's window as the astronauts come hurling back to Earth, a trip that takes less than 3.5 hours. A screengrab from the video is seen above.

The spacecraft "launches like a rocket, but comes in like a glider," Nyberg said

The capsule sways violently after it drops through the Earth's atmosphere, explains Nyberg. Even though a parachute and rocket engines are used to slow the vehicle down before it plops down in a remote region of Kazakhstan, it's still a rough landing.

Souyz

NASA

The Soyuz returning to Earth.

"I felt like I wanted to throw up," Nyberg said, referring to her landing last November. Nyberg says she couldn't walk by herself at first, but recovered fairly quickly. "By the time I got back to Houston, I was feeling good," she said.

Karen Nyberg

NASA

If you want to learn more about re-entering the Earth's atmosphere in the Soyuz, check out the video below released by the European Space Agency. Footage from the landing takes place around the 16:00-minute mark.

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