SpaceX: Nasa crew describe rumbles and jolts of return to Earth

  05 August 2020    Read: 1315
SpaceX: Nasa crew describe rumbles and jolts of return to Earth

Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley have described the rumbles, heat and jolts of returning from space in the Crew Dragon spacecraft on Sunday.

Behnken vividly described the clouds rushing by the window and jolts that were like being "hit in the back of the chair with a baseball bat".

But Hurley and Behnken said the spacecraft performed just as expected.

They splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico, ending the first commercial crewed mission to the space station.

"As we descended through the atmosphere, I personally was surprised at just how quickly events all transpired. It seemed like just a couple of minutes later, after the [de-orbit] burns were complete, we could look out the windows and see the clouds rushing by," he said at a news conference broadcast from Nasa's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

"Once we descended a little bit into the atmosphere, Dragon really came alive. It started to fire thrusters and keep us pointed in the appropriate direction. The atmosphere starts to make noise - you can hear that rumble outside the vehicle. And as the vehicle tries to control, you feel a little bit of that shimmy in your body.

"We could feel those small rolls and pitches and yaws - all those little motions were things we picked up on inside the vehicle."

As the spacecraft - named Endeavour by its crew - descended through the atmosphere, the rumbles increased in magnitude and the thrusters began to fire continuously. "I did record some audio but it doesn't sound like a machine, it sounds like an animal," said Behnken.

During the return from the International Space Station (ISS), the crew module has to separate from a section called the trunk, which has solar panels and heat-removal radiators.

"All the separation events, from the trunk separation through the parachute firings, were very much like getting hit in the back of the chair with a baseball bat," said Bob Behnken. "Pretty light for the trunk separation but with the parachutes it was a pretty significant jolt."

Behnken also described feeling some "warming" inside the capsule. He praised the engineers who worked on the Crew Dragon spacecraft: "I can't say enough about how well the SpaceX team trained us," he said.

Upon splashdown on Sunday, a flotilla of private boats approached the bobbing Dragon, which came down in the sea off Pensacola, Florida.

They were asked to leave amid concern over hazardous chemicals venting from the capsule's propulsion system.

"We certainly appreciate the folks wanting to participate in the event, but there are some safety aspects that - as the administrator [Nasa chief Jim Bridenstine] said - we'll have to take a look at, because it can't happen like it did before."

Hurley said they were not aware of the boats while they were sitting in the capsule because of the scorch marks over the windows. "You see it was daylight outside but very little else," he said.

But reflecting on the historic nature of the mission, Hurley said it "was one of the true honours of my entire life, but certainly my professional career".


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