Soyuz MS-10 launch failure

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Published 2018-10-11
A Soyuz-FG rocket launched the Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft with International Space Station Expedition 57-58 crew members, NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, on 11 October 2018, at 08:40 UTC (14:40 local time). Due to a booster error, the spacecraft entered a ballistic descend and the crew landed in Kazakhstan.
Credits:
NASA/Roscosmos
#SoyuzMS10
Soyuz-FG launches Soyuz MS-10
Пуск РКН Союз-ФГ с ТПК Союз МС-10
Soyuz MS-10 Failure
launch failure

All Comments (21)
  • @somedude4014
    Girl in background: failure failure. Girl narrating: everything is fine.
  • @widget3672
    Congratulations on the first manned rocket flight direct to Kazakhstan!
  • @gamestv4875
    The crew survived , period. One of the safest rockets in Space history. Love the Soyuz.
  • @1gavalanche1
    I love how the animation of the flight does not reflect at all what is actually happening.
  • Just thought I’d mention that Alexei Ovchinin’s first words after emerging from the Soyuz capsule after this failure were as he turned to Nick Hague “Well, that was a short trip”.
  • @Vijimn1
    It's very rare to see Soyuz fail. Glad cosmonauts are safe.
  • @manifestgtr
    As much as this sucks for the mission, it’s still a major success in my book. Everyone returned safely and everything performed roughly as it should, given the contingency. The rules of aviation/space travel are written in blood and we’ve learned many tragic lessons throughout the decades. It’s good to see that all of that sacrifice is starting to pay off for the next generation of astronauts/cosmonauts/etc.
  • @jakobfre5428
    Nobody: Spacex: launches astronauts YouTube: lets recommend failure of russian rocket
  • @Stratboy999
    Good to hear the escape system worked and the crew are OK.
  • @3.2Carrera
    One of the few times a failure was a great success. To have this catastrophic failure and not have loss of crew is absolutely outstanding and is a testament to the Russian's steadfast commitment their tried and true launch system.
  • @InvestmentJoy
    So sorry to hear about the failure, but glad the systems in place worked as designed. The Soyuz has a very awesome track record, glad to see the safety mechanisms worked as designed!
  • Rockets fail, they by their nature are dangerous machines, nice to see the Russians built a great back up escape feature, and it work to thank God, two brave men returned to earth safely
  • @horusfalcon
    To the brave crew of Soyuz MS-10 and to their support team, well done! You recognized a problem and brought your crew back alive. Thank you.
  • So, can we conclude that the animation that is supposed to be based on real telemetry from the rocket, is in fact not based on real telemetry? Since the animation shows speed and altitude and plot-curves all normal?
  • @Great_America
    I have to take my hat off to Russian engineering! Two men are alive today because of it 🇺🇸 🇷🇺
  • @watertriton
    The only people that do not make mistakes are the people that do not do things. It’s unfortunate the rocket launch did not go well but great job on the launch recovery system. It is the first failed launch that I’ve seen where the people we’re alive afterwards.