Novitsky was selected as a cosmonaut in 2006. Between February 2007 and July 2009 he completed basic spaceflight training and passed state exams with excellent grades. On August 1, 2009, he was qualified as a test-cosmonaut by the Interdepartmental Qualification Board, and between August 2009 and March 2010 he took the ISS advanced training course.
Expedition 33/34 From March 2010 to May 2012 he trained as the ISS
Expedition 31/
32 backup crew member, the Soyuz TMA-M Commander/ISS Flight Engineer. Part of
Expedition 33/
34 to the international space station where he served as ISS flight engineer. He was launched to space as part of the
Soyuz TMA-06M crew on October 23, 2012, and returned on March 16, 2013. Overall time in space was 143 days 16 hours and 15 minutes.
Expedition 50/51 Novitsky returned to space as part of
Expedition 50/
Expedition 51 which launched on November 17, 2016, on
Soyuz MS-03. On June 2, 2017, MS-03 undocked from the ISS, carrying Novitsky and
Thomas Pesquet back to Earth after 196 days in space.
Peggy Whitson remained on the ISS and returned on
Soyuz MS-04. Soyuz MS-03 touched down just over 3 hours after undocking, concluding Novitsky's second spaceflight.
Expedition 64/65 Novitsky returned to space for the third time in April 2021, launching aboard
Soyuz MS-18, alongside
Roscosmos cosmonaut
Pyotr Dubrov and American astronaut
Mark T. Vande Hei. Novitsky landed on MS-18 on 17 October 2021 with actress
Yulia Peresild and director
Klim Shipenko.
Soyuz MS-25/MS-24 Novitsky was elected commander of Soyuz MS-25. He flew with Belarusian cosmonaut
Marina Vasilevskaya and NASA astronaut
Tracy Caldwell Dyson. Novitsky and Vasilevskaya spent 13 days at the station and returned on Soyuz MS-24 with NASA astronaut
Loral O'Hara. ==Cinematography==