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NASA-SpaceX mission: Astronauts prep for splashdown from historic mission, despite tropical storm

Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley inside their Crew Dragon capsule on Aug. 1. | Courtesy NASA
(CNN) — SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft — carrying NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley — is slowly maneuvering closer to Earth and preparing for a splashdown later today in the Gulf of Mexico.
The spacecraft is expected to touch down off the coast of Pensacola, Florida, on Sunday at 2:48 pm ET. Behnken and Hurley’s safe homecoming will mark the end to a historic two-month mission and pave the way for the US to once again become a world leader in human spaceflight.
The astronauts have been aboard the Crew Dragon spacecraft, named Dragon Endeavour, since Saturday evening when it undocked from the International Space Station.
Behnken and Hurley began their historic two-month trip to the ISS in May, when the astronauts launched inside their Crew Dragon spacecraft from a ground pad in Florida. It was the first NASA astronaut launch from US soil since 2011 and the first time in history that a commercially developed spacecraft carried humans into orbit.
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Overnight, the vehicle conducted a series of engine burns to lower the vehicle’s altitude, preparing to take a dramatic plunge back into the Earth’s thick atmosphere later today.
Adding to the drama is Tropical Storm Isaias, which is barreling toward Florida’s east coast and threatening violent winds capable of damaging roofs and buildings.
NASA and SpaceX predetermined seven potential splashdown sites for this mission, four of which are to the west of Florida in the Gulf of Mexico: Pensacola, Tampa, Tallahassee and Panama City. And in that area, the wind and wave heights appear calm enough for the Crew Dragon to land safely.
Still, weather officials are keeping a close eye on the forecast, and they could call off the splashdown all the way up until the spacecraft begins reentering the Earth’s atmosphere.
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Behnken and Hurley — both married to fellow NASA astronauts —have young families waiting at home for them. Their sons dispatched a wake-up message for the astronauts this morning.
“Rise and shine daddy, we love you! We can’t wait to see you — wake up, wake up! …Don’t worry, you can sleep in tomorrow. Hurry home so we can go get my dog,” one of the children said.
The astronauts responded to mission control: “Hopefully the pressure’s all on whoever is making the weather call, because those boys seem excited to bring us home.
A safe homecoming is crucial. Though SpaceX previously launched a Crew Dragon on an uncrewed demonstration mission, Hurley and Behnken’s mission is still considered a test. Both men are veteran NASA astronauts and test pilots specifically trained to respond to any technical issues that may arise on the new vehicle, and NASA won’t officially certify Crew Dragon as a human-rated spacecraft until it makes a safe return.
The-CNN-Wire
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Source: eastidahonews.com

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