It is splashdown day for the Orion spacecraft!
Splashdown in 5 hours at 12:40 EST in the Pacific Ocean near Guadalupe Island, 250 miles SSW of San Diego.
The 6th and final trajectory correction burn occurring right now.
Shortly before the service module separates from the crew module, comms will be switched from NASA’s Deep Space Network to its Near Space Network and the TDRS satellite.
https://eyes.nasa.gov/apps/solar-system/#/sc_artemis_1?rate=0&time=2022-12-11T12:40:00.000+00:00
Webcast from 11:00 EST at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzZPzmMtQA8
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1/n
Eyes on the Solar System - NASA/JPL

Explore the 3D world of the Solar System. Learn about past and future missions.

Eyes on the Solar System - NASA/JPL
Here is a graph of Orion's speed and distance from Earth since the Dec 5 lunar flyby and RPF burn.
The Artemis blog site states that Orion's speed will be close to 40,000 km/h during reentry, as it accelerates rapidly during the last few hours of its return journey.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/
Data source: https://www.nasa.gov/specials/trackartemis/
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2/n
Artemis

Orion (and us virtual astronauts) taking a loving look yesterday at a crescent Earth.

"That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives.
To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known" - Carl Sagan.

More pics at https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/with/52555610193/
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3/n

NASA Johnson

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NASA's Landing and Recovery Team is well prepared for today's event. Few days ago, off the coast of San Diego, they were practicing bringing a mock Orion capsule into the well deck of the USS Portland (LPD 27).
More pics at https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/with/52555610193/
Also see https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/
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4/n
NASA Johnson

Explore NASA Johnson’s 63,197 photos on Flickr!

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"The Landing and Recovery Team consists of personnel and assets from the U.S. Department of Defense, including Navy amphibious specialists and Space Force weather specialists, and engineers and technicians from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Johnson Space Center in Houston, and Lockheed Martin Space Operations."
From https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/
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5/n
Artemis

For today's reentry, Orion will use a “skip entry” technique, which has never been tried before with a human-rated spacecraft.
Orion will dip into the upper part of Earth’s atmosphere at 40,000 km/s, partially slow down, skip back out of the atmosphere, then reenter for final descent using parachutes.
Advantages:
Improved landing accuracy.
Lower g-forces on astronauts.
Lower heat rate.
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/orion-spacecraft-to-test-new-entry-technique-on-artemis-i-mission
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkEBfxtg4Xg
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6/n
Orion Spacecraft to Test New Entry Technique on Artemis I Mission

Orion Spacecraft to Test New Entry Technique on Artemis I Mission

NASA
Orion update 10:15 EST : Orion altitude from earth's surface = 33,666 km. It is now closer to earth than geo-synchronous satellites like TDRS at 35,786 km altitude.
Speed = 15,255 km/s and rapidly increasing.
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7/n
Oh, what a wonderful sight from Orion at 10:30 a.m. EST!
Home Sweet Home ... beckons.
Distance ~ 30,000 km.
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFbVREEtc1Y
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8/n
Artemis I Live Feed from Orion Spacecraft (Official NASA Broadcast)

YouTube
"Astronaut Shannon Walker prepares to release a weather balloon from the deck of the USS Portland alongside members of the U.S. Space Force 45th Weather Squadron ahead of the splashdown of the Orion spacecraft on Dec 11."
Weather measurements and modeling are used, by a planning tool called Sasquatch, to predict where various parts of Orion will fall, so that they can be recovered quickly.
Sasquatch: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/searching-with-sasquatch-recovering-orion
More pics at https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/52556510176/
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9/n
Searching with Sasquatch: Recovering Orion

During Artemis missions, NASA’s Orion spacecraft will be traveling at 25,000 mph as it reenters the Earth’s atmosphere, which will slow it down to 325 mph.

NASA
NASA Artemis 1 webcast has started.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzZPzmMtQA8
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10/n
NASA’s Artemis I Mission Splashes Down in Pacific Ocean

On Dec. 11, the Artemis I mission will conclude with the entry, descent, and splashdown of the Orion spacecraft. After 25.5 days in space, and a 1.3-million-...

YouTube
NASA has reporting from the flight deck of the USS Portland.
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11/n

We have come a long way Orion!

Moon-centric graphic source: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/20180001259/downloads/20180001259.pdf + updated overlays by me.
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12/n

One more hour before Orion splashdown!
Here is a graph of Orion's speed and distance from Earth since the Dec 5 lunar flyby and RPF burn.
The Artemis blog site states that Orion's speed will be close to 40,000 km/h during reentry,.
Orion has picked up quite a bit of speed during the last hour.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/
Data source: https://www.nasa.gov/specials/trackartemis/
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13/n
Artemis

Orion Command Module Separation will occur around 12:01:30 EST.
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkEBfxtg4Xg
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14/n
NASA Preview of Artemis I Splashdown

YouTube
Orion Command Module Separation was completed around 12:01:30 EST.
Orion is now somewhere over Antarctica as it travels North into the Pacific Ocean towards the Baja.
Now comes the challenging 40 minutes of the reentry and landing sequence. 🚀 🔥 🤞
Comm is now via the NASA TDRS satellite, not NASA DSN.
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15/n
Current location of Orion, west of S. America.
The heat in on 🔥
Comm blackout now.
The graphs on the left show the spacecraft altitude and speed after the start of Orion's re-entry sequence.
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzZPzmMtQA8
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16/n
NASA’s Artemis I Mission Splashes Down in Pacific Ocean

On Dec. 11, the Artemis I mission will conclude with the entry, descent, and splashdown of the Orion spacecraft. After 25.5 days in space, and a 1.3-million-...

YouTube
Orion was indeed traveling close to 40,000 km/h just before the blackout period,
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17/n
At 12:32 EST, visual observations of Orion.
Speed down to 20,000 km/h.
Comm and live video from Orion at 12:35 EST!
12:38 EST - 20,000 ft
12:39 EST - parachutes deployed!
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18/n
12:41 EST - Orion Splashdown!
A textbook entry by Orion.
Congrats to the worldwide team that made this possible and to humanity.
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19/n
A precision landing by Orion, very close to the recovery team and equipment, thanks to the "skip entry” technique, the technological innovations and the innovators that made it possible.
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20/n
The last view of earth from Orion at 11:40 EST, an hour before splashdown, from an altitude of ~23,000 km.
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzZPzmMtQA8
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21/n
NASA’s Artemis I Mission Splashes Down in Pacific Ocean

On Dec. 11, the Artemis I mission will conclude with the entry, descent, and splashdown of the Orion spacecraft. After 25.5 days in space, and a 1.3-million-...

YouTube

Continued coverage of the Orion recovery mission at https://youtu.be/Si2iks2-T34

For those who are wondering why it is taking so long, here is what NASA says - "Engineers will perform several additional tests while Orion is in the water and before powering down the spacecraft and handing it over to the recovery team aboard the USS Portland."
https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/
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22/n

Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube

We finally caught it!
Time to haul it in 🐳
And whose idea was it to bring that silly harpoon?

Screen caps from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Si2iks2-T34
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23/n

Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube

The special cradle in the USS Portland where Orion will rest, after its fantastic 26-day voyage.

Next stop - the U.S. Naval Base in San Diego and then the Kennedy Space Center in FL for autopsy, I mean inspection, retrieval of data recordings, removal of onboard payloads, etc.

Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Si2iks2-T34
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24/n

Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube
Are we getting ready to tie up the five-eyed creature from space or what?
Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Si2iks2-T34
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25/n
Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube
NASA Johnson

Explore NASA Johnson’s 63,197 photos on Flickr!

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Me, the mighty Orion. I boldly went where no spacecraft has gone before. I traveled over a million miles. I kissed the moon and waltzed in a DRO. I plunged into a fiery double brake entry at 40,000 km/h and landed on a dime.
And now this ignominy?
Why couldn't you give me an extra pair of wings so I could fly 200 miles to San Diego? A ticker-tape parade would have been nice.

Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Si2iks2-T34
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27/n

Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube

Orion has been towed to the cradle inside the well deck of the USS Portland.
Once it is secured, the water will be drained out.
And Orion will begin its next journey, that to San Diego and onwards to KSC in FL.

Screen cap from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Si2iks2-T34
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28/n

Artemis I - Splashdown

YouTube
This is what astronauts, if they were present, would have seen during Orion's fiery re-entry.
This is a video from inside Orion on its test flight EFT-1 on Dec 5, 2014. The 4-hour mission reached 5,800 km altitude and ended with a high-energy reentry at 32,000 km/h.
The footage shows plasma, created by friction with the atmosphere, change from white to yellow to lavender to magenta as the temp rose.
Did not use skip-reentry.
https://youtu.be/MtWzuZ6WZ8E
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29/n
Astronaut’s-Eye View of NASA’s Orion Spacecraft Re-entry

YouTube
Hopefully, NASA will release a similar video from yesterday's re-entry of Orion.
We can expect a video of the recovery operations as well, similar to this one from 2014.
The images in this video from 2014 look very familiar to those of us who watched the recovery operation yesterday!
https://youtu.be/PbRgTRSdBLgGo #Artemis #Artemis1 #Orion #NASA #ESA
30/n
U.S. Navy Recovers NASA Orion Space Capsule • EFT-1

YouTube
This video created just before the EFT-1 flight in 2014 provides an overview of that mission and a good animation of the re-entry phase of Orion.
The re-entry sequence starts at the 3:44 mark.
EFT-1 used an Apollo-style direct re-entry, not the skip-re-entry technique employed yesterday.
https://youtu.be/gjglwMPvzVo
#Artemis1 #Orion #NASA #ESA
31/n
Orion Trial By Fire

YouTube
The Navy ship used to transport Orion during its EFT-1 test mission in Dec 2014 was the USS Anchorage.
The Orion crew module was transported to the Naval Base in San Diego and then to KSC in Florida.
Artemis 1 Orion, now ensconced inside the USS Portland, will follow a similar path and sequence of steps.
Source: https://blogs.nasa.gov/orion/2014/12/08/orion-coming-to-san-diego-today/
#Artemis1 #Orion #NASA #ESA
32/n
Orion Coming to San Diego Today – Orion

What does the close-up image of Orion yesterday remind you of?
Perhaps a majestic jumping spider?
Spider photo credit: Uda Dennie
More Orion pics at https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/with/52557138957/
#Artemis1 #Orion #NASA #ESA
33/n
NASA Johnson

Explore NASA Johnson’s 63,197 photos on Flickr!

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Judging from this map and the track of the Navy Littoral Combat ship USS Montgomery, which was supporting the Orion recovery effort, it looks like Orion landed about 110 miles south of Guadalupe Island.
Lat: 27.3 Lon: -117.9
The ship is now hanging off the coast of San Diego.
I could not locate USS Portland, which is currently transporting Orion to the Naval Base in San Diego.
Map source: http://www.shiptraffic.net/current-position/USS-Montgomery-(LCS-8)/1/369970910
@planet4589
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34/n
USS Montgomery (LCS-8) Current Position and Live Map Location | ShipTraffic.net

USS Montgomery (LCS-8) current location & position live map tracker

@AkaSci I really want to know how the dummies inside fared!
@AkaSci Hey! You got balloons!