Astronaut Scott Kelly to Retire From NASA in April

Scott Kelly is retiring after his year-long mission in space.

Kelly, 52, joined the Astronaut Corps in 1996 and currently holds the record for the most time spent in space, NASA said. His retirement will take place April 1.

Following his retirement, Kelly will continue to participate in ongoing research related to his one-year mission. His brother, retired astronaut Mark Kelly, also made himself available for NASA's twin study during Kelly's time in space.

Kelly called his mission in space a "profound challenge" that gave him a "unique perspective" and time to reflect on his next step to further capabilities in space and on Earth.

"My career with the Navy and NASA gave me an incredible chance to showcase public service to which I am dedicated, and what we can accomplish on the big challenges of our day," Kelly said. "I am humbled and excited by new opportunities for me to support and share the amazing work NASA is doing to help us travel farther into the solar system and work with the next generation of science and technology leaders."

“Records are meant to be broken,” Kelly said. “I am looking forward to when these records in space are surpassed.”

NASA's twin study is critical to understanding how the human body responds to extended space missions as part of an effort to expand the boundaries of space exploration beyond low-Earth orbit, according to NASA.

"His passion for this work has helped give hundreds of thousands of people a better understanding of what NASA does..." he said. "We appreciate his years of service and anticipate many benefits to come from them, thanks to the research he’s supporting.”