Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

After 115-day mission, International Space Station astronauts safely return home

Add as a preferred source on Google

A three-astronaut crew with members from the United States, Russia, and Japan made a parachute landing in Kazakhstan after a three-and-a-half hour journey from the International Space Station late Saturday night.

Entering a Russian Soyuz capsule and leaving the ISS at 8:35 p.m. ET Saturday night, Russian station commander Anatoly Ivanishin, Kate Rubins of the U.S. and NASA, and Takuya Onishi from Japan landed at 11:58 p.m. ET. Having completed their 115-day mission to install a parking spot for commercial space taxis and become the first to use a DNA sequencer in space, the crew left behind three astronauts who arrived at the station last week.

Recommended Videos

According to the CBC, the capsule landed near Dzhezkazgan, on the treeless Central Asian steppes.

“It was closely tracked by helicopters as it wafted through partly cloudy skies under a parachute marked in red and white concentric circles,” the CBC wrote. “The craft landed upright, which made the extraction of the astronauts quicker than when capsules land on their sides.”

Sitting on the steppes after landing on earth, the astronauts remained in their capsule seats as they readjusted to earth’s gravitational forces after the four months of living in weightless conditions. As is standard procedure with space missions, the astronauts were taken to a medical tent for examinations.

The crew-members left behind at the ISS were only able to spend a week with the returning astronauts, taking part in training missions and a change of command ceremony at the station on Friday.

“I’m kind of reluctant to close the hatch,” Ivanishin said during the ceremony. “The time is very special here … I didn’t have time to know what’s going on our planet, and maybe it’s for the better. On the space station, you live in a very friendly, very good environment.”

Ivanishin transitioned control over the station to NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough, who reached the ISS along with Russian crew-members Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko on Oct. 21. The new crew will work alone, but will welcome three new members next month when another mission commences.

Harrison Kaminsky
Harrison’s obsession in the tech space originated in his father’s electronics store in Denville, New Jersey, where he…
AI has already fallen into the wrong hands and they’re using it to make bombs
Logo, Text

Artificial intelligence has quickly become the go-to tool for everything from writing emails and summarizing meetings to helping students study or developers debug code. But the same technology that saves people time can also be misused, and a new report suggests that terrorist organizations are finding ways to do exactly that.

According to a research paper shared with The New York Times ahead of its publication, researchers found evidence that members of Boko Haram have been using popular AI chatbots to support both day-to-day activities and combat-related tasks. Interviews with 27 former members conducted in Nigeria over the past two years suggest that tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Grok, Meta AI, and DeepSeek were used to gather technical information, troubleshoot weapons, and even assist with planning attacks.

Read more
Claude Code can now browse the web without opening Chrome
The desktop app now includes an in-app browser that can read websites, click links, and interact with web apps.
Claude Code Featured

Developers spend a surprising amount of time bouncing between their code editor, browser tabs, API documentation, GitHub issues, and design files. Anthropic thinks Claude Code should simply do all of that without constantly asking users to switch windows. The company has announced a new in-app browser for Claude Code on desktop, allowing its AI coding assistant to open websites, read documentation, inspect designs, and interact with web pages directly from within the application.

A browser built into Claude Code

Read more
Apple is suing OpenAI over theft of trade secrets in blockbuster lawsuit
The lawsuit claims OpenAI recruited Apple employees and obtained confidential information about unreleased products.
Apple store Apple Building Apple Logo

For the past two years, Apple and OpenAI have been presented as close AI partners. ChatGPT powers key Apple Intelligence features, Siri can hand complex queries over to OpenAI, and together the two companies helped bring generative AI to millions of Apple devices. Now, that partnership has taken a dramatic turn.

What is Apple accusing OpenAI of?

Read more