May 3, 2021 at 2:45 pm

SpaceX Crew-1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS

by twistedsifter

SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS 2 SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS

 

Astronauts Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, and Shannon Walker of NASA, and Soichi Noguchi of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) splashed down safely in the SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Panama City, Florida, at 2:56 a.m. EDT after 168 days in space.

The return marks the longest-duration mission of a crewed American spacecraft to date. Check out highlights from the incredible nighttime splashdown below. It was the first nighttime US splashdown since Apollo 8 in 1968.

 

 

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-1 mission launched Nov. 15, 2020, on a Falcon 9 rocket from the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The astronauts named the spacecraft Resilience, in honor of their families, colleagues, and fellow citizens and highlighting the dedication displayed by the teams involved with the mission and demonstrating that there is no limit to what humans can achieve when they work together. Crew Dragon Resilience docked to the Harmony module’s forward port of the space station Nov. 16, nearly 27 hours after liftoff.

Overall, Hopkins, Glover, Walker, and Noguchi traveled 71,242,199 statute miles during their 168 days in orbit (with 167 days aboard the space station), completing 2,688 orbits around Earth. With splashdown, the crew also broke the American crewed spacecraft mission duration record of 84 days, 1 hour, 15 minutes, set by the final Skylab crew in February 1974.

Crew-1 also is the first night splashdown of a U.S. crewed spacecraft since Apollo 8’s predawn return in the Pacific Ocean on Dec. 27, 1968, with NASA astronauts Frank Borman, Jim Lovell and Bill Anders.

 

SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS 1 SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS

 

The second splashdown of the Commercial Crew Program comes just over one week after the launch of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-2 mission, the second long-duration mission. The Crew-2 astronauts launched April 23 and will live and work aboard the station until their return to Earth in about six months.

 

SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS 3 SpaceX Crew 1 Makes Rare Nighttime Splashdown After 6.5 Hour Journey from ISS

NASA astronauts Shannon Walker, left, Victor Glover, Mike Hopkins, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Soichi Noguchi, right are seen inside the SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience spacecraft onboard the SpaceX GO Navigator recovery ship shortly after landing in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Panama City, Florida, at 2:56 a.m. EDT May 2, 2021. Credits: NASA/Bill Ingalls