Artemis II splashdown: Orion capsule scheduled to land off California coast at just after 5pm local time – live updates

Artemis II splashdown: Orion capsule scheduled to land off California coast at just after 5pm local time – live updates


What to expect as Artemis II comes home

The splashdown of the Orion capsule will follow a precise timeline through the afternoon and evening on Friday.

Nasa says the scheduled splashdown time of 5.07pm PT (8.07pm ET; 1.07am Saturday BST) is approximate, and will harden as the capsule passes certain milestones during its descent.

Here’s what the day looks like right now (all times Pacific):

  • 8.35am Crew wakes up

  • 10.50am Crew completes cabin configuration preparation

  • 11.53am Final return trajectory correction burn

  • 4.33pm Orion separates from service module

  • 4.37pm Crew module raise burn to place spacecraft at correct angle for reentry

  • 4.53pm Entry interface to Earth’s atmosphere at 400,000ft

  • 5.07pm Splashdown

Orion will be exposed to heat up to 5,000F (2,760C) during its 25,000mph reentry. A set of 11 parachutes will deploy in sequence at set altitudes following reentry that will slow the spacecraft to 17mph at splashdown.

It could take up to two hours after splashdown for crews from Nasa and the US navy to reach the capsule, open the hatch and release the astronauts. Nasa plans to take them by helicopter to a military base in San Diego for medical checks, then they will fly back to Houston’s Johnson Space Center.

Nasa plans a post-landing press conference about two and a half hours after splashdown.

The Guardian will have a livestream at the top of this blog from about 6.30pm ET.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

While we wait for Nasa’s live coverage of reentry to start at about 6.30pm ET, here are some more highlights from the mission in pictures:

Artemis II pilot Victor Glover is pictured looking out of the window on the Orion spacecraft during the lunar flyby on Monday. Photograph: NASA/Reuters
Artemis II crew captured this view of the Earth next to the moon before Earthset during a lunar flyby, 6 April. Photograph: AP
The moon fully eclipsing the sun, as seen from the Orion spacecraft. Photograph: NASA/AFP/Getty Images
The Moon, with its Orienale basin prominent. Photograph: NASA/Reuters
The Artemis II crew of Nasa astronauts Christina Koch, Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. Photograph: NASA/Reuters
The crew’s sleeping bags are illuminated inside the Orion spacecraft. Photograph: NASA



Source link

Posted in

Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

Leave a Comment