*By Carlo Versano* An American astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut are alive and well after a harrowing emergency landing in which the pair aborted their mission to space mid-flight due to an unknown malfunction aboard. Nick Hague and Aleksey Ovchinin were picked up in Kazakhstan, where they landed after ditching out at roughly 160,000 feet. Russian media [reports](https://twitter.com/FMBA_of_Russia/status/1050405604047671296) revealed that both astronauts were uninjured after their rescue. The emergency landing of the Soyuz MS-10 was the latest in a string of failures for the Russian space agency, which became the Americans' de facto ride to the space station after the shuttle operation ceased in 2011. Hague and Ovchinin were headed to the ISS as part of a routine crew swap. Sarah Lewin, an editor at Space.com, said it was unclear when (or how) a new mission would take place. [Video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0l5QBmqQoI) of the failed launch appears to show the capsule detaching from the booster rockets less than two minutes after its launch. The capsule then performed a "ballistic landing," Lewin explained, in which the engines are used to slow the fall of the spacecraft, which would have been travelling with up to 7Gs of force. "It's not something they expect to happen very often, but it's something that they do train for extensively," she said. In August, a tiny hole was discovered drilled into the hull of the Soyuz spacecraft docked at the space station, though Lewin said there was no evidence that the two incidents were related; she called Thursday's failure "really bad luck." This would have been Hague's first trip to space. The rookie astronaut was picked to begin NASA training in 2013 after earning a degree from MIT and a career in the U.S. Air Force. For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/soyuz-rocket-forced-to-make-emergency-landing).

Share:
More In Science
Stretching Your Dollar: How to Negotiate Medical Bills
With high healthcare costs, bills can quickly add up. In some cases, it is possible to negotiate your medical bills. Barak Richman, law professor at George Washington University, joined Cheddar News to discuss the easiest way to talk to medical debt companies about what's owed.
Stretching Your Dollar: Navigating Insurance
Millions of people have selected insurance plans for 2024 but sometimes navigating them can be tricky time consuming and expensive. Paula Pant, host of 'Afford Anything' podcast, joined Cheddar News to break down what's needed to know about their insurance plans.
CDC Urges Increased Vaccine Coverage
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced an urgent need to increase vaccination coverage in response to rising respiratory disease levels.
Load More