It's not a good look.

Change of Orientation

Russian state-owned news agency TASS reported today that the country's Soyuz spacecraft caused the orientation of the International Space Station to change — the second incident of a Russian-made spacecraft causing the station to spin unexpectedly since July.

"During the SoyuzMS18 engines testing, the station’s orientation was impacted," reads a tweet by the country's space agency Roscosmos. "As a result, the ISS orientation was temporarily changed. The station’s orientation was swiftly recovered due to the actions of the ISS Russian Segment Chief Operating Control Group specialists."

It's unclear how much the ISS spun, but fortunately, nobody was hurt.

"The station and the crew are not endangered," the Energia Space Rocket Corporation, part of Roscosmos, told TASS.

Spinning Again

It's the second incident of its kind in recent months. In July, Russia's brand new Nauka module unexpectedly fired its thrusters just hours after docking with the ISS, causing the entire station to spin one-and-a-half times.

The July incident marked the first time NASA flight director Zebulon Scoville had to declare a "spacecraft emergency," as he later admitted to The New York Times.

The Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft that caused the erratic behavior is scheduled to carry actress Yulia Peresild and director Klim Shipenko back down to Earth after their weeklong stint on board the ISS filming the first feature-length movie in space.

Three astronauts took a brief ride on the spacecraft late last month to relocate it for the arrival of Persild and Shipenko.

Fortunately, Russia says, nobody was at risk during today's blunder — but the repeated screwups don't exactly instill confidence.

More on the July incident: Crisis Briefly Spins International Space Station Out of Control


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