Astronauts take shelter as air leaks worsen on International Space Station
On Friday, five astronauts aboard the International Space Station were directed by NASA mission control to take shelter in a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft for approximately two hours due to a worsening air leak. The leak originated from a crack on the Russian segment of the station, which Russian counterparts were attempting to fix.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedOn Friday, five astronauts aboard the International Space Station were directed by NASA mission control to take shelter in a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft for approximately two hours due to a worsening air leak. The leak originated from a crack on the Russian segment of the station, which Russian counterparts were attempting to fix. The astronauts involved included the four members of NASA's Crew-12 mission (two Americans, one French astronaut, and one Russian cosmonaut) and an additional US astronaut. NASA eventually reversed the evacuation order after assessing the rate of the air leak in collaboration with Russian agencies.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedThe order to evacuate was reversed after roughly two hours as the leak rate was examined.
Four astronauts of Nasa’s Crew-12 mission and another US astronaut were ordered to enter their SpaceX-built Crew Dragon spacecraft.
A worsening air leak aboard the International Space Station prompted five astronauts to take shelter and prepare for evacuation.
Russia attempted to fix a crack on its portion of the orbital laboratory.