
ISS: Russia's unmanned Soyuz MS-14 Spacecraft undocks from ISS
An unmanned Russian Soyuz MS-14 spacecraft carrying a humanoid robot undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) on Friday.
The Soyuz spacecraft landed on south-central Kazakhstan at 21:32 GMT on Friday, bringing Russia's Skybot F-850 robot back to Earth. The mission completed a series of tests aimed at conducting more crewed launches using upgraded Soyuz boosters next year, as well as testing technology for future automated payload journeys between the Earth and ISS.
The spaceship docked with the ISS on August 26, after a previous aborted attempt due to a failure of one of the components on the station's automatic docking system.

An unmanned Russian Soyuz MS-14 spacecraft carrying a humanoid robot undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) on Friday.
The Soyuz spacecraft landed on south-central Kazakhstan at 21:32 GMT on Friday, bringing Russia's Skybot F-850 robot back to Earth. The mission completed a series of tests aimed at conducting more crewed launches using upgraded Soyuz boosters next year, as well as testing technology for future automated payload journeys between the Earth and ISS.
The spaceship docked with the ISS on August 26, after a previous aborted attempt due to a failure of one of the components on the station's automatic docking system.