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During Underway Recovery Test-8 in March 2020, NASA's Landing and Recovery team aboard the USS John P. Murtha approach a full-sized mockup Orion spacecraft in the Pacific Ocean.
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Navy divers attach tending lines to a mock Orion capsule during the weeklong Underway Recovery Test 9 in November 2021 from the USS John P. Murtha in the Pacific Ocean.
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The Apollo 14 command module with astronauts Alan Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar Mitchell aboard approaches touchdown in the South Pacific Ocean, bringing to successful end a 10-day lunar landing mission. The splashdown occurred Feb. 9, 1971, approximately 765 nautical miles south of American Samoa. The crew was flown by helicopter to the U.S.S. New Orleans prime recovery ship.
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Oak Hill native Melissa Jones is NASA's landing and recovery director for the Artemis I Orion capsule.
In this screenshot from live coverage of NASA's Orion spacecraft return powered flyby around the moon Earth appears as a crescent toward the bottom of the frame. Orion is on its way back to Earth after Monday's maneuver positioned it for its return trip. A splashdown landing wrapping up the Artemis I mission is expected on Sunday, Dec. 11, in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California.
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A test version of the Orion capsule is pulled into the flooded well deck of the USS John P. Murtha during an October 2018 NASA splashdown exercise in the Pacific Ocean.
J. Travis Hunsucker, a Florida Institute of Technology ocean engineering and marine sciences assistant professor.
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KoshBlog
KoshBlog