SpaceX and NASA are investigating a parachute issue that occurred on the
last two capsule flights.
One of the four main parachutes was slow to inflate during the return of
four astronauts to Earth last November. The same thing happened last week as
a Dragon cargo capsule was bringing back science experiments from the
International Space Station. In both cases, the sluggish parachute
eventually opened and inflated—although more than a minute late—and the
capsules splashed down safely off the Florida coast.
Officials for SpaceX and NASA said Friday they want to better understand
what's happening, especially before launching another crew in a month or
two. They're looking at photographs and inspecting the parachutes for clues,
taking "extra caution with this very critical system," said Steve Stich,
manager of NASA's commercial crew program.
"We're not taking anything for granted," SpaceX's William Gerstenmaier, a
former NASA official, told reporters.
SpaceX's first private flight to the space station, with three ticket-buying
businessmen and their retired astronaut escort, is set to blast off from
NASA's Kennedy Space Center on March 30. NASA's next astronaut ferry flight
would follow on April 15.
Officials said the lagging parachutes also occurred during development and
in previous cargo missions, and could just be a natural feature of the
multiple-chute design. Despite the slow opening of one of the four large
chutes, the capsules still descended at a safe rate, they noted. The descent
data was near normal, Gerstenmaier said.
Only three of four parachutes are needed for a safe splashdown off the
Florida coast, according to officials.
Similar parachutes are used on Boeing's Starliner crew capsule and NASA's
Orion moon capsule, neither of which has launched astronauts yet. These,
too, sometimes lag when inflating, Stich said, and so the results of the
SpaceX investigation will be shared.
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Space & Astrophysics
I hope you manage to eliminate the issue
ReplyDeleteWhen i watched the splashdown it looked like one was being suffocated from the initial opening
If possible maybe the chutes coming out at 4 side openings rather than the centre it will help catch the air
if SpaceEx is a private company why is a govt agency involved with this issue?
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