Table of Contents

History
Disadvantages
Launch vehicles
List of spacecraft splashdowns
Crewed spacecraft
Uncrewed spacecraft
Gallery
See also
Notes
References
Bibliography
External links

Splashdown

Apollo 15 makes contact with the Pacific Ocean.

Locations of Atlantic Ocean splashdowns of American spacecraft prior to the 21st century

Locations of Pacific Ocean splashdowns of American spacecraft

Splashdown is the method of landing a spacecraft or launch vehicle in a body of water, usually by parachute. This has been the primary recovery method of American capsules including NASA's Mercury, Gemini, Apollo and Orion along with the private SpaceX Dragon. It is also possible for the Boeing Starliner, Russian Soyuz, and the Chinese Shenzhou crewed capsules to land in water in case of contingency. NASA recovered the Space Shuttle solid rocket boosters (SRBs) via splashdown, as is done for Rocket Lab's Electron first stage.

As the name suggests, the vehicle parachutes into an ocean or other large body of water. Due to its low density and viscosity, water cushions the spacecraft enough that there is no need for a braking rocket to slow the final descent as is the case with Russian and Chinese crewed space capsules or airbags as is the case with the Starliner.

The American practice came in part because American launch sites are on the coastline and launch primarily over water. Russian launch sites such as Baikonur Cosmodrome are far inland, and most early launch aborts would descend on land.

History

Apollo 14 returns to Earth, 1971.

The splashdown method of landing was used for Mercury, Gemini and Apollo (including Skylab, which used Apollo capsules). Soyuz 23 unintentionally landed on a freezing lake with slushy patches of ice during a snowstorm.

On early Mercury flights, a helicopter attached a cable to the capsule, lifted it from the water and delivered it to a nearby ship. This was changed after the sinking of Liberty Bell 7. All later Mercury, Gemini and Apollo capsules had a flotation collar (similar to a rubber life raft) attached to the spacecraft to increase their buoyancy. The spacecraft would then be brought alongside a ship and lifted onto deck by crane.

After the flotation collar is attached, a hatch on the spacecraft is usually opened. At that time, some astronauts decide to be hoisted aboard a helicopter for a ride to the recovery ship and some decided to stay with the spacecraft and be lifted aboard ship via crane. All Gemini and Apollo flights (Apollos 7 to 17) used the former, while Mercury missions from Mercury 6 to Mercury 9, as well as all Skylab missions and Apollo-Soyuz used the latter, especially the Skylab flights as to preserve all medical data. During the Gemini and Apollo programs, NASA used for the astronauts to practice water egress.

Apollo 11 was America's first Moon landing mission and marked the first time that humans walked on the surface of another planetary body. The possibility of the astronauts bringing pathogens from the Moon back to Earth was remote, but not ruled out. To contain any possible contaminants at the scene of the splashdown, the astronauts donned special Biological Isolation Garments and the outside of the suits were scrubbed prior to the astronauts being hoisted aboard and escorted safely inside a Mobile Quarantine Facility.

The splashdown of the SpaceX CRS-25 resupply mission
Both the SpaceX Dragon 1 and Dragon 2 capsules were designed to use the splashdown method of landing. The original cargo Dragon splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Baja California. At the request of NASA, both the crew and cargo variations of the Dragon 2 capsule splash down off the coast of Florida, either in the Atlantic Ocean or the Gulf of Mexico.

The early design concept for Orion (then known as the Crew Exploration Vehicle) featured recovery on land using a combination of parachutes and airbags, although it was also designed to make a contingency splashdown if needed. Due to weight considerations, the airbag design concept was dropped for Orion, and it conducts landings via splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California.

Disadvantages

Perhaps the most dangerous aspect is the possibility of the spacecraft flooding and sinking. For example, when the hatch of Gus Grissom's Liberty Bell 7 capsule blew prematurely, the capsule sank and Grissom almost drowned. Since the spacecraft's flooding will occur from a location in its hull where it ruptures first, it is important to determine the location on the hull that experiences the highest loading. This location along the impacting side is determined by the surrounding 'air cushion' layer, which deforms the water surface before the moment of impact, and results in a non-trivial geometry of the liquid surface during first touch-down. Soyuz 23 was dragged under a frozen lake by its parachutes. The crew became incapacitated by carbon dioxide and were rescued after a nine-hour recovery operation.

If the capsule comes down far from any recovery forces, the crew may be stranded at sea for an extended period of time. As an example, Scott Carpenter in Aurora 7 overshot the assigned landing zone by 400km. These recovery operation mishaps can be mitigated by placing several vessels on standby in different locations, but this can be an expensive option.

Exposure to salt water can have adverse effects on vehicles intended for reuse, such as Dragon.

Launch vehicles

Space Shuttle SRB being recovered by Freedom Star after splashing down on STS-133

Some reusable launch vehicles recover components via splashdown. This was first seen with the Space Shuttle SRBs, with STS-1 launching in 1981. Out of 135 launches, NASA recovered all but two sets of SRBs.

SpaceX has conducted propulsive splashdowns of the Falcon 9 first stage, Super Heavy booster, and Starship spacecraft. These vehicles are designed to land on land or modified barges and do not always survive intact after tipping over in the water; SpaceX has mainly conducted propulsive splashdowns for development flights. After the launch of CRS-16, the booster experienced a control issue and splashed down in the ocean instead of making an intended landing at Landing Zone 1.

Rocket Lab intended to catch the first stage of their Electron rocket with a helicopter as it descended under parachute, but abandoned this idea in favor of parachute splashdown. In 2020, Rocket Lab made their first booster recovery.

List of spacecraft splashdowns

Crewed spacecraft

#SpacecraftAgencyLanding dateCoordinatesRecovery shipMiss distance (km)Reference
1Freedom 7NASAMay 5, 196127°N, 75°53′W5.6km
2Liberty Bell 7NASAJuly 21, 196127°32′N, 75°44′W9.3km
3Friendship 7NASAFebruary 20, 196221°26′N, 68°41′W
(USS Randolph**)
74
4Aurora 7NASAMay 24, 196219°27′N, 63°59′W
(**)
400
5Sigma 7NASAOctober 3, 196232°06′N, 174°28′W7.4
6Faith 7NASAMay 16, 196327°20′N, 176°26′WUSS Kearsarge8.1
7Gemini 3NASAMarch 23, 196522°26′N, 70°51′WUSS Intrepid111
8Gemini 4NASAJune 7, 196527°44′N, 74°11′W81
9Gemini 5NASAAugust 29, 196529°44′N, 69°45′WUSS Lake Champlain270
10Gemini 7NASADecember 18, 196525°25′N, 70°07′WUSS Wasp12
11Gemini 6ANASADecember 16, 196523°35′N, 67°50′WUSS Wasp13
12Gemini 8NASAMarch 17, 196625°14′N, 136°0′E
(**)
2
13Gemini 9ANASAJune 6, 196627°52′N, 75°0′WUSS Wasp0.7
14Gemini 10NASAJuly 21, 196626°45′N, 71°57′W6
15Gemini 11NASASeptember 15, 196624°15′N, 70°0′W5
16Gemini 12NASANovember 15, 196624°35′N, 69°57′WUSS Wasp5
17Apollo 7NASAOctober 22, 196827°32′N, 64°04′W3
18Apollo 8NASADecember 27, 19688°N, 165°W2
19Apollo 9NASAMarch 13, 196923°15′N, 67°56′WUSS Guadalcanal5
20Apollo 10NASAMay 26, 196915°2′S, 164°39′W2.4
21Apollo 11NASAJuly 24, 196913°19′N, 169°9′W3.13
22Apollo 12NASANovember 24, 196915°47′S, 165°9′WUSS Hornet3.7
23Apollo 13NASAApril 17, 197021°38′S, 165°22′W1.85
24Apollo 14NASAFebruary 9, 197127°1′S, 172°39′W1.1
25Apollo 15NASAAugust 7, 197126°7′N, 158°8′W1.85
26Apollo 16NASAApril 27, 19720°43′S, 156°13′W0.55
27Apollo 17NASADecember 19, 197217°53′S, 166°7′WUSS Ticonderoga1.85
28Skylab 2NASAJune 22, 197324°45′N, 127°2′WUSS Ticonderoga
29Skylab 3NASASeptember 25, 197330°47′N, 120°29′WUSS New Orleans
30Skylab 4NASAFebruary 8, 197431°18′N, 119°48′WUSS New Orleans
31Apollo CSM-111NASAJuly 24, 197522°N, 163°WUSS New Orleans1.3
32Soyuz 23USSROctober 16, 1976Lake TengizMi-8 helicopter
33Crew Dragon Demo-2SpaceXAugust 2, 202029°48′N, 87°30′WGO Navigator
33Crew Dragon Crew-1SpaceXMay 2, 202129°32′N, 86°11′WGO Navigator
34Inspiration4SpaceXSeptember 18, 2021GO Searcher
35Crew Dragon Crew-2SpaceXNovember 7, 2021GO Navigator
35Axiom Mission 1SpaceXApril 25, 2022Megan
36Crew Dragon Crew-3SpaceXMay 6, 2022Shannon
37Crew Dragon Crew-4SpaceXOctober 14, 2022Megan
38Crew Dragon Crew-5SpaceXMarch 11, 2023Shannon
39Axiom Mission 2SpaceXMay 31, 2023Megan
40Polaris DawnSpaceXSep 15, 2024

Uncrewed spacecraft

SpacecraftAgencyLanding dateCoordinatesRecovery shipMiss distance
Jupiter AM-18
(Able and Baker)
USAFMay 28, 195948to N Antigua Island16km
Mercury-Big JoeNASASeptember 9, 19592,407km SE Cape Canaveral925km
Mercury-Little Joe 2 Sam The Rhesus MonkeyNASADecember 4, 1959319km SE Wallops Island, Virginia? km
Mercury-Redstone 1ANASADecember 19, 1960378.2km SE Cape Canaveral12.9km
Mercury-Redstone 2NASAJanuary 31, 1961675.9km SE Cape Canaveral209.2km
Mercury-Atlas 2NASAFebruary 21, 19612293.3km SE Cape CanaveralUSS Donner20.9km
Discoverer 25
(Corona 9017)
USAFJune 16, 1961mid-air recovery missed
Mercury-Atlas 4NASASeptember 13, 1961257.5km E of Bermuda64.4km
Mercury-Atlas 5NASANovember 29, 1961804.7km SE of Bermuda? km
Gemini 2NASAJanuary 19, 196516°N, 49°W 3423.1km downrange from KSCUSS Lake Champlain38.6km
AS-201NASAFebruary 26, 1966SW 8,472km downrange from KSCUSS Boxer? km
AS-202NASAAugust 25, 1966NE 804.7km southwest of Wake IslandUSS Hornet? km
Gemini 2-MOLUSAFNovember 3, 19668,149.7km SE KSC near Ascension Island11.26km
Apollo 4NASANovember 9, 1967NW16km
Apollo 6NASAApril 4, 196827°40′N, 157°59′WUSS Okinawa? km
Zond 5USSRSeptember 21, 1968SEUSSR recovery naval vessel and 105km
Zond 8USSROctober 27, 1970730km SE of the Chagos Archipelago, Indian OceanUSSR recovery ship 24 km
Cosmos 1374USSRJune 4, 198217°S, 98°E 560km S of Cocos Islands, Indian OceanUSSR recovery ship? km
Cosmos 1445USSRMarch 15, 1983556km S of Cocos Islands, Indian OceanUSSR recovery ship? km
Cosmos 1517USSRDecember 27, 1983near Crimea, Black SeaUSSR recovery ship? km
Cosmos 1614USSRDecember 19, 1984? km W of the Crimea, Black SeaUSSR recovery ship? km
COTS Demo Flight 1SpaceXDecember 8, 2010800km west of Baja California, Mexico, Pacific Ocean?0.8km
Dragon C2+SpaceXMay 31, 2012NW??
CRS SpX-1SpaceXOctober 28, 2012?American Islander?
CRS SpX-2SpaceXMarch 27, 2013?American Islander?
Exploration Flight Test 1NASADecember 5, 2014, 275mi west of Baja California
Crew Dragon Demo-1SpaceXMarch 8, 2019In the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Pensacola, FloridaGO Searcher
SpaceX CRS-21SpaceXJanuary 14, 2020In the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Tampa, FloridaGO Navigator
Artemis INASADecember 11, 2022Pacific Ocean, west of Baja CaliforniaUSS Portland4 nm
IFT-4SpaceXJune 6, 2024Indian Ocean
IFT-5SpaceXOctober 13, 2024Indian Ocean
IFT-6SpaceXNovember 19, 2024Indian Ocean

Gallery


See also


Notes

References


Bibliography


External links


Category:Spaceflight concepts
Category:Lists of coordinates
Category:Types of landing