Created 5-Sep-23
Modified 11-Sep-23
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excerpts form spaceflightnow.com:
Blazing like a shooting star as it streaked high above northern Florida, a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft carried four space station fliers back to Earth early Monday, splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean east of Jacksonville to wrap up a six-month stay in orbit.

Crew-6 commander Stephen Bowen, pilot Woody Hoburg, cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev and UAE crewmate Sultan Alneyadi undocked from the station’s forward Harmony module at 7:05 a.m. EDT Sunday to kick off a 17-hour flight back to Earth.

The automated Crew Dragon executed a 16-minute de-orbit thruster firing starting at 11:24 p.m., slowing the spacecraft by about 250 mph — just enough to drop it back into the lower atmosphere for a steep southwest-to-northeast trajectory carrying it above Central America and north Florida.

Viewed from the Kennedy Space Center, the returning spacecraft looked like a slow-motion meteor blazing a long, brilliant trail across the sky as the Crew Dragon was enveloped in a cloud of super-heated plasma, slowing from orbital velocity of 17,100 mph to just 300 mph or so in a matter of minutes.

With SpaceX recovery crews and NASA observers standing by, the capsule’s four main parachutes deployed on time, inflated and lowered the spacecraft to a gentle splashdown in light wind and five-foot waves off Florida’s east coast at 12:17 a.m.