The launch failure last month of a manned mission to space was caused by a faulty sensor that was damaged during the Soyuz rocket's assembly at the cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the head of a Russian commission investigating the incident said on Thursday.
A Russian cosmonaut and U.S. astronaut were forced to abort their mission on Oct. 11 after a rocket bound for the International Space Station failed, sending them plunging back to Earth in an emergency landing.
Presenting the findings of an official investigation into the accident, Igor Skorobogatov told reporters that two more Soyuz rockets may have the same defect and that additional checks were being introduced into the rocket assembly process.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
NASA Astronaut Captures Mysterious 'Red Sprites' Glowing In Earth's Atmosphere Space Station Astronauts Forced To Shelter After Russian Satellite Breaks Up As Big As A Football Field, 16 Orbits Of Earth In 24 Hours: All About ISS The 'Fake' CrowdStrike Worker Who Crippled Windows Users Worldwide On Sonu Sood's Post About Kanwar Yatra Order, Kangana Ranaut's Rejoinder Woman Dies As Portion Of Mumbai Building Collapses After Heavy Rain 14 Indians Rescued From 'Cyber-Slavery' In Cambodia Wait To Return Home Dawood Declared Terrorist In Individual Capacity, Says Bombay High Court UPSC CSE Prelims 2024: Name And Roll Number-Wise Results Out Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.