"On behalf of the SpaceX and NASA teams, welcome back to
planet Earth," Michael Heiman, the SpaceX engineer communicating with the
astronauts, said after splashdown.
The first
astronaut trip to orbit by a private company parachuted to a safe conclusion in
the Gulf
of Mexico on Sunday.
It was the first water landing by NASA astronauts since 1975, when the agency’s
crews were still flying to and from orbit in the Apollo modules used for the
historic American moon missions.
Riding in a
capsule built and operated by SpaceX, the rocket company founded by Elon Musk,
two NASA astronauts — Robert L. Behnken and Douglas G. Hurley — splashed down
near Pensacola, Fla., on Sunday afternoon.
The Crew Dragon
capsule, suspended under four giant billowing orange-and-white parachutes,
settled upright into the water at a gentle pace of 15 miles per hour at 2:48
p.m. Eastern time.
“On behalf of the
SpaceX and NASA
teams, welcome back to planet Earth,” Michael Heiman, the SpaceX engineer
communicating with the astronauts, said after splashdown. “And thanks for
flying SpaceX.”
More than an hour
later, after Mr. Behnken and Mr. Hurley were helped out of the spacecraft, Mr.
Hurley thanked the employees of NASA and SpaceX who helped make the mission a
success.
“You should take a
moment to just cherish this day, especially given all the things that have
happened this year,” he said. Although NASA was the customer this time, the
mission could be a first step to more people going to space for a variety of
new activities, like sightseeing, corporate research and satellite repair. A
goal of the space agency is to turn over to private enterprise some things it
used to do.
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