ᴴᴰ Full Onboard Re-entry into Earth’s Atmosphere ● New NASA Spacecraft

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024
  • Onboard ride during the re-entry of Orion shows the extreme conditions a spacecraft endures as it returns to Earth.. Orion launched on its first test flight of two orbits in 4.5 hours on Dec.5 - 2014. ... Enable Annotations for Metric values
    EFT 1 traveled 3,600 miles above Earth to test the new vehicle. It was NASA’s furthest & fastest capsule mission since Apollo.
    The new spacecraft landed in the Pacific Ocean under its three main parachutes.
    Music: Interstellar Spheres by William Pearson
    For information about Orion, visit:
    www.nasa.gov/orion
    .

Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @tensevo
    @tensevo 3 года назад +74

    It's very cool how it's basically space, then passes through 60k feet and sky turns blue, and we are sub-sonic.
    Just fantastic.

    • @thevikingwarrior
      @thevikingwarrior 2 года назад +2

      You gotta love friction.

    • @ohhhhh6269
      @ohhhhh6269 2 года назад +2

      The video disappointed me a lil. I thought I was go to see it from 60 miles up and falling through hrough the 5 million degree heat! Lol Isn’t it cool how when you watch a video riding the booster, its hella quiet 40 miles up but as you keep falling it gets louder n louder!

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад

      ​@@thevikingwarriorITS NOT FRICTION HFUTRX6RESJTTF7,YGRD

    • @thevikingwarrior
      @thevikingwarrior Год назад

      @@petterlarsson7257 Er, it is friction.

  • @ChloeDust
    @ChloeDust 8 лет назад +336

    It's trippy how fast it's going yet it almost looks like it's just floating down, love the music btw, relaxing.

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade 4 года назад +7

      Music reminds me of KSP

    • @allaintordil9761
      @allaintordil9761 3 года назад +2

      i love you

    • @John-mf6ky
      @John-mf6ky 3 года назад +9

      @@allaintordil9761, chill bruh lol..

    • @Kaysmug
      @Kaysmug 3 года назад +1

      After how many joints you saw this?

    • @laxmisrivastava4000
      @laxmisrivastava4000 3 года назад +1

      Yes.the amount of negative 'g'force is impression 👍🏿

  • @ThatCorvetteGuy
    @ThatCorvetteGuy 4 года назад +124

    Does anyone else find this terrifying and incredible at the same time?

    • @aprilk1803
      @aprilk1803 2 года назад +2

      Me

    • @Country_Fried
      @Country_Fried Год назад +1

      Makes me want to experience it in real time

    • @orionbarnes1733
      @orionbarnes1733 Год назад +3

      It's one of the many things that is so beautiful about spaceflight, but also capable of killing you so quickly. Like most of these things, it's definitely best enjoyed through a thick pane of glass.

  • @dangerjackalope6123
    @dangerjackalope6123 9 лет назад +60

    One of the coolest things I've ever seen on the internet.

  • @chriswright8333
    @chriswright8333 9 лет назад +86

    So beautiful and awe inspiring! Although Orion was unmanned, it's as if Mother Earth is accepting her children back into her nurturing arms. Splashdown is like returning to where our very existence began, in the waters of the vast oceans.

    • @omnivore2220
      @omnivore2220 2 года назад +5

      You mean God’s earth. Or are most science and technology enthusiasts now into Gaia worship? I mean, it deserves thinking about, doesn’t it?

    • @jesus4400
      @jesus4400 Год назад +2

      The Earth missed the curvature 😂😂😂 0:25

    • @Professor_Sex
      @Professor_Sex Год назад +1

      you mean my earth, I'm the supreme ruler of earth

  • @RRRRobbbb
    @RRRRobbbb 6 лет назад +56

    1:40
    Once the picture clears up, you get a sense of how profoundly fast that thing is moving. Crazy.

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray 2 года назад +4

      10:15 ...we have splash down!

    • @Bob-gn8ph
      @Bob-gn8ph Год назад

      ​@@bradford_shaun_murraythere was no steam at Splashdown

  • @tangbein
    @tangbein 9 лет назад +456

    seeing the atmostphere change the color from black to blue was cool!

    • @TERRY72763
      @TERRY72763 7 лет назад +7

      Seeing you Type, Black atmosphere was *Cooler*

    • @blackmidimin6720
      @blackmidimin6720 6 лет назад +3

      TERRY WOODS I agree

    • @TonyMontana-fw1wr
      @TonyMontana-fw1wr 5 лет назад +3

      Flatearth people

    • @kishoresamala8725
      @kishoresamala8725 5 лет назад

      Yes, Absolutely ... Was about to post the same comment ...

    • @tangbein
      @tangbein 4 года назад +7

      Huh, curious. I've never received replies before now. Regarding the atmosphere please excuse my shamefur dispray.

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 9 лет назад +839

    Wow. Sky goes from black to blue in seconds 4:01 . I've always wondered what that looks like

    • @whopperlover1772
      @whopperlover1772 9 лет назад +60

      I assume it's because they are going so fast. I mean at 30 seconds after launch, they are going insanely fast and have already gained lots of velocity. So amazing.

    • @Merilix2
      @Merilix2 8 лет назад +18

      +ByteMe not a matter of speed but matter of altitude, how dense air is above you.

    • @trespire
      @trespire 8 лет назад +34

      +EASYTIGER10 The X-15 was a hypersonic experimental plane. It could be piloted from inside the atmosphere out in to suborbital space, renter the atmosphere and land on a runway.
      There is some amazing footage of high altitude flights where the sky changes to the blackness of space.

    • @asdfjkli
      @asdfjkli 8 лет назад +91

      +EASYTIGER10 It doesn't. It looks brighter & bluer because the camera no longer has the relatively bright earth in view so it increases the exposure which makes the previously "dark" (read: thin) atmosphere fade into view.

    • @slickwillie3376
      @slickwillie3376 7 лет назад +7

      Jupiter rising
      Indeed it is BS. Anything can be faked nowadays.

  • @In4It789cat
    @In4It789cat 5 лет назад +26

    Very cool. Huge props to anyone willing to sit inside of it.

  • @lukeforrester7570
    @lukeforrester7570 5 лет назад +30

    I felt like I was experiencing the whole event in a dream. What a beautiful experience to behold.

  • @MarceloLaraM
    @MarceloLaraM 4 года назад +838

    Its like going from hell to heaven. Let’s take care of this paradise called earth, it’s unique in the known universe

    • @voltage5614
      @voltage5614 4 года назад +14

      agreed brother 💯

    • @robertclayborne9750
      @robertclayborne9750 4 года назад +24

      "My friend; earth is the universe. "And you can never stay away from it. "Everything in the upper firmament sit above the earth. Only the sun and moon can be seen with the naked eye. Everything else must be seen by a high powered telescope that they send up, above the earth in it lower to upper orbit to pierce down range over the same earth to see all that is orbiting down there. Why do you think they have never declared to you that they have seen the ends of the earth, after having a space station up there traveling at over 2,500 miles an hours? Only God can declare the ends of the earth. And he has said that the earth has no ending to it. So it must expand the universe as I said. Don't believe the sun is so big that you can sit 150 earth's into it, because it is not true. To prove it to yourself, just look up at the sun, and then take a look at how much sky is still left to look at, and not see a end to the sky.

    • @magnarion
      @magnarion 4 года назад +42

      @@robertclayborne9750 cool, so my hand is the biggest object in the universe! If I hold it in front of my eyes it is everything there is

    • @thick45
      @thick45 4 года назад +5

      @@magnarion ah, so that's what it is.

    • @rudrecciah
      @rudrecciah 4 года назад +18

      @@robertclayborne9750 I can't tell if this is genuine or a shitpost

  • @nikistaz
    @nikistaz 4 года назад +100

    Makes me wish I could be in NASA and go up there. So amazing.

    • @briane173
      @briane173 4 года назад +8

      You don't realize how quick the slow-down is from 67 miles up and 20,000 mph to 0 and 0 inside of 10 minutes. The G forces on reentry must feel pretty ugly.

    • @zhongxina9420
      @zhongxina9420 4 года назад +17

      @@briane173 well most astronauts are veteran fighter pilots that are trained to their limits in g forces to even be qualified

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 2 года назад

      No need. You can just pay your way and go up for fun without having to grind out boring experiments now.

    • @NothingEverHappensLol
      @NothingEverHappensLol Год назад

      @@zhongxina9420 and you arent and niether is op ya little piggies so keep on bootlickin for nasa

    • @zhongxina9420
      @zhongxina9420 Год назад +1

      @@NothingEverHappensLol well currently yes but I'm planning to become a military pilot in the near future so....

  • @XpertPilotFSX
    @XpertPilotFSX 9 лет назад +262

    Man, Ive never actually seen real reentry flames up close. amazing!

    • @teravolt6113
      @teravolt6113 8 лет назад +13

      +XpertPilotFSX After all it's just air that becomes really hot due to being compressed by the space vehicle going ahead across denser and denser air so fast. If you get on your bicycle and ride against the wind you'll feel the air stop in front of you, slowing you down, but you won't significantly heat it up at such slow speeds so nothing interesting happens apart from you getting tired faster (because you're spending more energy compressing the air in front of you). But if it's a space vehicle enduring reentry, the air in front of it becomes so hot to the point that electrons get stripped off of N2, O2 (also O3 higher up in the stratosphere) molecules. Electrons moving around due to the supplied energy=light=flames and flashes you can see from the ground around the reentering object, much like shooting stars, and a condensation trail in daylight (provided the air column is humid enough). If the object is blunt, the plasma sheath develops farther from the object and it doesn't heat the object so much as if it were pointy.
      The same things happen inside the cylinders of a working diesel engine moments before fuel gets injected. No wonder it lights off by itself, without the aid of a spark. Chemistry and physics are so interesting, to the point you soon forget the pain of the Calculus they require you to study, once you've mastered it.

    • @XpertPilotFSX
      @XpertPilotFSX 8 лет назад +5

      TeraVolt Rlly? I though re-entry flames were caused by friction. Well, friction has got to contribute to SOME of the heating, doesnt it?

    • @teravolt6113
      @teravolt6113 8 лет назад +13

      Most of the kinetic energy of the object isn't absorbed by "sliding" through the air, although some of it is also lost that way. It's absorbed by continously hitting it. It's like shooting a bullet through a wall, if the wall is thick enough the bullet still stops inside it after all its energy has been transfered to the environment by repeatedly punching the matter on its way, with the only exception that the wall breaks rather than compressing itself in like the air does. The first thing that develops around the object during atmospherical entry is the plasma sheath, after the air mass in front of the object has been heated up enough to lose electrons and turn into plasma, and after the sheath develops the parts of the object in contact with the sheath start heating up to the point their surface material begins ablating (turning from solid to gas state in one go). Only the surface actually heats up. The residual heat makes the ablated particles combust and they start emitting colored light, or, in other words, a flame develops. If you observe an entering object (like a shooting star) from the ground you'll see a fireball and a colored trail behind it: the fireball is the plasma and the heated surfaces radiating and the colored trail is the ablated material. Its color depends upon the composition of the material. For example, if you burn a rich (more gas than air, just close the air inlets on the burner) mixture of methane or butane through a Bunsen burner you'll see a yellow-orange flame. That's the heated up carbon particles of the gas (due to the rich mixture, not so many molecules of gas actually engage combustion due to a lack of O2, so what you get is what basically you would see if you set fire to graphite) emitting its own wavelenght of light due to electrons reaching higher energy levels and then releasing their energy through visible light.

    • @SentinelleInfo
      @SentinelleInfo 8 лет назад +1

      +XpertPilotFSX Flames without oxygen sounds kind of weird !
      Should be more like a plasma thing ?

    • @teravolt6113
      @teravolt6113 8 лет назад +5

      +SentinelleInfo A flame is made, basically, of hot gases, some molecules/atoms of which can be found stripped of electrons due to being fed energy that made the electrons "jump off" from their orbitals (they're called ions). Supply anything with enough energy (in that case, kinetic energy from the fast moving object transfered to the air trying to stop it, but if something's burning then it's basically the energy released from molecules combining and rearranging in a new and more stable way, and when it comes to combustion one of the more stable molecules that result is usually in gaseous state) and it starts emitting electromagnetic waves. If their lenghts fall in the visible spectrum, the object emits light. If the flame is hot enough to the point most of its contents are ionized gases, then it's considered plasma. As i said, the first thing that develops around an object that crosses atmosphere fast enough is a plasma fireball due to the air being compressed by the moving object and therefore heating up (think of a bike's hand pump: if you inflate a bike's tire with a hand pump you'll find it warmer after you're done. The air inside it while you're inflating the tire is much like the hot air/plasma, and the pump is the object that heats up due to contact with the air it made hot during its fall through the atmosphere), just like in a diesel engine, to the point it's hot enough to ionize and become plasma. So, the answer is, it's plasma.

  • @derekwall200
    @derekwall200 5 лет назад +16

    i love the background music. that was awesome watching the plasma light up the spacecraft as it was screaming through the atmosphere at 20,000 mph

  • @blomkillen
    @blomkillen 5 лет назад +7

    The technic and science behind those parachutes is so amazing

  • @danahan01
    @danahan01 9 лет назад +45

    That plasma trail behind the capsule is absolutely freaking awesome!!

    • @unbearable9770
      @unbearable9770 3 года назад +4

      They should equip astronauts with long sticks and marshmallows.

    • @chrisb9960
      @chrisb9960 3 года назад

      @@unbearable9770 You’re killing’ me smalls! lol

  • @barthchris1
    @barthchris1 8 лет назад +477

    Most of the energy it took to reach its orbit is dissapated in that plasma trail. Wow!

    • @samrobinson9110
      @samrobinson9110 8 лет назад +70

      Wow... pretty obvious, but I never thought of that...

    • @firstnamelastname4752
      @firstnamelastname4752 8 лет назад +7

      Kinda like a battery, hey.

    • @barthchris1
      @barthchris1 8 лет назад +16

      As far as analogies go it may work...
      A really fast heat battery that charges going up, stays charged while in orbit until the discharge on the way back down. Atmospheric drag could be akin to self discharge the all rechargeables have..
      But there's no anode, cathode or electrolyte, cant run in series but parallel is possible.
      There's a shitload of energy "stored" in this "battery". Wonder how a short circuit would work? I guess a collision with the moon would be the closest thing possible?

    • @samrobinson9110
      @samrobinson9110 8 лет назад +10

      Or to make it a little less mindbending, like a race car with frictionless wheel bearings accelerating to top speed, coasting around the track a few times, and then using its brakes to slow down again to a stop. Since the brake pads are pretty much an ablative decelerant, the trail of heat and hot brake dust could be visualized as the capsule's plasma trail. Kinda...
      If there was a way for the capsule to transfer all of its energy to earth without dissipating all of it in the atmosphere or losing altitude, you would have your short circuit. Maybe if there were a theoretical mountaintop at the same height as the capsule... :-D

    • @BlackMasterRoshi
      @BlackMasterRoshi 7 лет назад +5

      Less like a battery and more like a flywheel.

  • @NathanStar-vw3dm
    @NathanStar-vw3dm 5 лет назад +31

    I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it.
    -Jack Handey

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 3 года назад +3

      People only expect war because others want peace. What if you wanted war because you knew the only way to achieve a form of peace is for nobody to win.
      How do you create a way nobody wins and everybody wins at the same time?

    • @randysmith4331
      @randysmith4331 2 года назад

      @@topsecret1837 utter demolishment

    • @randysmith4331
      @randysmith4331 2 года назад

      Except for plant life and bees.

  • @Guitarfollower22
    @Guitarfollower22 8 лет назад +1077

    Imagine if during the second world war the great nations, rather than fighting, collaborated their resources into space technology?

    • @christianraddclife6852
      @christianraddclife6852 8 лет назад +59

      The world would be so much better

    • @christianraddclife6852
      @christianraddclife6852 8 лет назад +33

      I'd imagine it being like Star Citizen but less futuristic

    • @RikkiSan1
      @RikkiSan1 8 лет назад +11

      If only...

    • @magearon
      @magearon 8 лет назад +81

      Imagine if the Roman Empire never fell, and thus we would have skipped the Dark Ages entirely. Which would makes us so much more technologically advanced.

    • @mmmail1969
      @mmmail1969 8 лет назад +52

      go read some history first! The "Dark Ages" as you call them, were actually a period of profound intellectual development! They were simply termed the "dark ages" by the "humble" folk of the renaissance!

  • @evansmith2821
    @evansmith2821 9 лет назад +76

    A wonderful experience. A video that makes you think about everything.

    • @mickronson7578
      @mickronson7578 5 лет назад +7

      Yeah it makes you think about what is real and what is just bull shit mate.

    • @cattybound2011
      @cattybound2011 5 лет назад +7

      @@mickronson7578 it makes you think about science and its advancements. If it doesn't, then you have a limited brain.

    • @outerlands3382
      @outerlands3382 5 лет назад +2

      Makes you think NASA forgot the fisheyes

    • @johnulmerRacing
      @johnulmerRacing 4 года назад +8

      @@mickronson7578 makes me think about how serious your head injury must have been.

    • @Frontdesk99
      @Frontdesk99 3 года назад

      @@mickronson7578 Oh wow, the idiots are really everywhere.

  • @twiggy27111976
    @twiggy27111976 4 года назад +42

    That was beautiful! Even more beautiful than something Hollywood could create because it’s real! Well done to everyone involved. Superb video 👍

    • @jjevans1693
      @jjevans1693 3 года назад +6

      The movie gravity looked more real. Not bad special effects though

    • @Squirrel_314
      @Squirrel_314 2 года назад +3

      @@jjevans1693 Oooh, an edgelord.

    • @danjacksonguitar3701
      @danjacksonguitar3701 Год назад +1

      ​@@jjevans1693 looked more real than real life? Eh... no

    • @jjevans1693
      @jjevans1693 Год назад +1

      @@danjacksonguitar3701 Thanks for your opinion little boy.

    • @ongabriendocaminos2197
      @ongabriendocaminos2197 Год назад +1

      @@jjevans1693 Don't be so ignorant and study a little, okay? There are more than 10 space agencies from countries like Russia, China, Japan, Canada, Europe, with hundreds of thousands of people involved, plus hundreds of thousands of private individuals (astronomers, scientists, researchers, and professors of different subjects) that we love to study. , investigate and learn, but people like you question all our work... and say that "everything is a lie"??

  • @BuzzardSalve
    @BuzzardSalve 9 лет назад +45

    I just realized that each parachute has different patterning. Obviously used for identification if something goes wrong.

    • @KSparks80
      @KSparks80 6 лет назад +4

      Different colored wraps on the main cords, too. (Red, Yellow, Blue)

    • @MrDavidh4
      @MrDavidh4 5 лет назад +4

      Wouldn't it have been a lot easier if they just numbered them "1", "2", and "3"?

    • @gerRule
      @gerRule 5 лет назад +1

      David Harrison no obviously not

    • @danceswithcritters
      @danceswithcritters 3 года назад +1

      There is coded info. in those patterns .

  • @famerlylove6061
    @famerlylove6061 6 лет назад +5

    Why is that so beautiful. The sheer energy in that one area is mind blowing. Just awesomeness

  • @jasonjmarchi
    @jasonjmarchi 6 лет назад +83

    Love the narrator's voice.

    • @MrDavidh4
      @MrDavidh4 5 лет назад +13

      That would be NASA Public Affairs spokesman Rob Navias. He's been working with NASA since the early 1990's.

    • @gwiyomifatty8987
      @gwiyomifatty8987 4 года назад +4

      His voice so calm like David attenborough

    • @detectiveandy6323
      @detectiveandy6323 4 года назад

      I believe that's scott Kelly, the astronaut with the twin brother

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT 4 года назад +2

      _Sounds more like Ken Squier. I kept thinking he was gonna calmly say,_
      _"and here he comes, up through the pack, that black number 3, Dale Earnhardt."_
      xD

    • @user-oe4dk6sb5u
      @user-oe4dk6sb5u 3 года назад +1

      @@MAGGOT_VOMIT Ha he does sound like Ken Squire.

  • @billwest1945
    @billwest1945 8 лет назад +109

    800 miles in 2 minutes...amazing!

    • @malenatully9897
      @malenatully9897 6 лет назад +2

      Bill West WOW!!with that speed you get an instant “facelift”

    • @moneybag5569
      @moneybag5569 5 лет назад +9

      imagine how sick they feel when they land 🤮🤮

    • @mohanram8249
      @mohanram8249 4 года назад

      Ya that's crazy speed I did a Bungie jump in Australia once a 130 ft drop took about 10 sec for me reach the bottom ...

    • @svm6916
      @svm6916 4 года назад

      @@moneybag5569 theyre struggling to walk coz theyre muscles are weak if they came fr ISS

    • @iCore7Gaming
      @iCore7Gaming 4 года назад

      @@moneybag5569 you wouldn't feel sick for several reasons. All you feel is heavier because of deceleration

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 7 лет назад +6

    It's cool how they steer it on reentry. The heat shield is mounted at a slight tilt on the bottom of the spacecraft. So by rotating the capsule, they can decrease the drag on one side, and slowly turn left or right, or if rotated so the low drag side is top or bottom, they can increase or decrease the angle of entry, and thus the landing distance.

  • @Duder-1
    @Duder-1 4 года назад +6

    Can’t believe I’m just now seeing this video - I’m so captivated

  • @jawoody9745
    @jawoody9745 9 лет назад +43

    As they used to say in the 60's, on the only 3 networks available, NBC, CBS, and ABC, "Everything is a go!!!" I was a very young kid then. but I watched every mission from Gemini 3, as a baby, to Apollo 17, the last Lunar Landing in 1972."

    • @uppercut2246
      @uppercut2246 7 лет назад +9

      And you watched the first moon landing right, the recording of a recording, filmed on some crappy canvas, then fed to the media as a Live feed. You would think that all the details surrounding such an Historic event would be preserved for ever right. Dear Nasoles, could we look at all the telemetry, so we can confirm the landing! Erm, w seem to have lost all the data, oop's sorry about that. WTF up.

    • @sprsae9003
      @sprsae9003 7 лет назад +4

      james woody the sad thing is that we probably wont broadcast the mars landing on most tv channels!

    • @dhughes1392
      @dhughes1392 7 лет назад +5

      Sprsae Probably because there won't be a Mars mission... or a real Mars mission. lol.

    • @vitakyo982
      @vitakyo982 6 лет назад +2

      Lunar landings were faked . ( & yes the world is round )

    • @markwarren7116
      @markwarren7116 5 лет назад +3

      @@uppercut2246...Hey dumbass....You can see the flag when pics were taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO)

  • @suasponte8363
    @suasponte8363 5 лет назад +3

    This stuff never gets old

  • @joseportillo701
    @joseportillo701 2 года назад +1

    The music makes that chaotic free fall looks so peaceful.

  • @paulm5197
    @paulm5197 9 лет назад +82

    This is an incredible example of human ingenuity. We should be very, very, proud.

    • @patman0250
      @patman0250 9 лет назад +3

      +Paul M why!!?? this is very unsafe old and crappy technology . I think you meant to say mans achievements not this crappy rocket that's killed so many innocent people for something as stupid as a peace of foam

    • @paulm5197
      @paulm5197 9 лет назад +5

      +patman0250
      Are you kidding? This WAS unsafe until we tested and perfected it, just like air travel. Just how many people do you suppose "this crappy rocket" killed?
      We humans are just beginning to explore the Final Frontier. We will never reach its end, but try to imagine what we might do and learn along the way!
      We're going to the stars. That may happen this century or the next, but it's going to happen, and it will enrich human culture in ways we cannot imagine,

    • @g13flat
      @g13flat 6 лет назад +8

      Just a shame that we can't provide clean drinking water for everyone. Now that would be something to be very very proud about.

    • @tirthankarsarkar4206
      @tirthankarsarkar4206 6 лет назад +4

      @@g13flat I anticipated some morons would bring other examples to show that we shouldn't be proud about these fantastic scientific achievements.

    • @heartwilson.8943
      @heartwilson.8943 6 лет назад +1

      Not really, humans are not designed to explore space...probably for a good reason, until we evolve 1000s of years later, maybe adapt grow gills to breath with out air etc.

  • @raktimjsarmah
    @raktimjsarmah Год назад +3

    Beautiful but it gives goosebumps. Mother Earth you are beautiful 😍

  • @Terrin-oz9dy
    @Terrin-oz9dy Год назад

    When you see something so beautiful it hurts... The parachutes, unparalleled and so beautiful...

  • @SimAlex20000
    @SimAlex20000 9 лет назад +17

    this footage reminds me of 2001: A space odyssey. absolutely stunning.

    • @jjevans1693
      @jjevans1693 3 года назад +3

      Exactly, science fiction

    • @soberek
      @soberek 2 года назад

      Go watch the 2010 Odyssey (sequel) aerobraking scene.

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад

      @@jjevans1693 exactly schizophrenia

  • @ghostwriter4046
    @ghostwriter4046 9 лет назад +20

    Such an incredible video, thank you so much for posting, kind regards .

  • @CoCojoy420
    @CoCojoy420 Год назад +2

    My tiny soul is delightful,wow, amazing

  • @laker4life36
    @laker4life36 3 года назад +10

    It’s crazy to think that this vehicle hasn’t flown again in almost 7 years!

    • @travismotorsports9478
      @travismotorsports9478 2 года назад +3

      it’s crazy to think that vehicle was 4000° going 20,000 mph so fast it actually has to slow down 19,000 mph to even break the sound barrier crazy that’s even possible.

  • @manifestgtr
    @manifestgtr 4 года назад +7

    Atmospheric reentry really is one of the most beautiful things in all of aviation/space travel.

    • @heatshield
      @heatshield 2 года назад

      nailed it

    • @Midwayy10
      @Midwayy10 2 года назад

      bruh no shit it quite literally is very beautiful

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад

      and scary

    • @Anthroparian
      @Anthroparian 10 месяцев назад

      Shit had me crying bro, it’s so majestic. If anything makes me believe in god it’s seeing earth from space. It looks like home, which is rightfully is

  • @charlesstock3323
    @charlesstock3323 5 лет назад +2

    welcome home everyone mission accomplished good to see you home Thanx for your service and dedication to our space program I'm proud of you all be safe god bless

    • @Annie-ph8vq
      @Annie-ph8vq 4 года назад

      @shaolin Justice 🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫

  • @DaWanderer
    @DaWanderer 8 лет назад +7

    Absolutely amazing. I'm in complete awe. Can't really find the words to describe what I feel....

    • @mycroft16
      @mycroft16 3 года назад

      Now try and imagine being inside Orion as it is re-entering and what that experience must be like.

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад

      @@mycroft16 youd probably pass out from g forces if you arent trained

  • @monkynutzuk
    @monkynutzuk 9 лет назад +57

    That chunk of metal is hauling SERIOUS ass

  • @infected7258
    @infected7258 Год назад +1

    Damn man that NASA commentator was incredible

  • @TheDude321
    @TheDude321 6 лет назад +4

    NASA space travel will always fascinate me. Amazing stuff man.

    • @Bob-gn8ph
      @Bob-gn8ph Год назад

      Go spend a few days over at Celebrate Truth Channel .....do it

  • @justy256
    @justy256 9 лет назад +130

    Really appreciate the metric conversions.

    • @graxx1451
      @graxx1451 7 лет назад +21

      I agree.I find it totally unprofessional of NASA to consistently speak in miles,per hour,the majority of the World is metric!

    • @haphihung658
      @haphihung658 7 лет назад +10

      Gra Xx NASA is an US government agency, therefore they must use the Imperial system in public outreach. They use the metric system in their work however.

    • @messidios1548
      @messidios1548 7 лет назад +3

      William G Danson for aviation I prefer imperial, it’s more precise IMO, maybe change nautical miles but it’s ok for me

    • @missingno2401
      @missingno2401 6 лет назад +6

      There's nothing wrong with the imperial system

    • @ExaltedDuck
      @ExaltedDuck 6 лет назад +3

      Just divide feet by 3 for meters and multiply miles by 2 for kilometers. It's not dead nuts accurate but it's easy enough to do mentally on the fly. I mean, it's not like it's rocket science or something.

  • @eveningstarnm3107
    @eveningstarnm3107 Год назад +2

    Gosh. I didn't know there was background music in space. That's probably the best thing about being an astronaut, right?

  • @n2motocross
    @n2motocross 8 лет назад +17

    I love how all the 'self-appointed' astrophysicists come out of the woodwork on these videos.

    • @ghostfox2473
      @ghostfox2473 7 лет назад +2

      lol I'm not self appointed, I'm self taught. There is a difference.

    • @aboriani
      @aboriani 6 лет назад +3

      I know, it's easy to pick on people that look smarter than you than admit the fact that there are lots of intelligent people around the world, and none of them is in your social circle...

  • @stamatisiliadis8844
    @stamatisiliadis8844 5 лет назад +16

    the most scary and dangerous phase in every mission... the mother earth atmosphere consequences are merciless!

    • @arandomzoomer4837
      @arandomzoomer4837 4 года назад +1

      Launching isn't easy though. You're riding on a controlled explosion into space.

    • @yosoydeyarumal
      @yosoydeyarumal 4 года назад

      That's nodda modda???!!!! Moddda shpuld be good!

  • @rockstarJDP
    @rockstarJDP 4 года назад +2

    Theres something so relaxing about watching those parachutes gently bobbing around, nearly fell asleep!

  • @johndeluna692
    @johndeluna692 8 лет назад +164

    what a soothing music.

    • @firstnamelastname4752
      @firstnamelastname4752 8 лет назад +3

      Agreed, made me sub.

    • @jordans123ful
      @jordans123ful 7 лет назад +2

      It works great for indoctrinating

    • @SuperAdnan117
      @SuperAdnan117 6 лет назад +5

      If you play KSP, or if you ever intend to, I'm sure you'll absolutely LOVE the moment you finally enter orbit around the home planet. Well, a nerve-wracking moment too if you ask me!

    • @BOROMIR420
      @BOROMIR420 6 лет назад +5

      ^^^found the nut-case, tinfoil hat guy!!!!

    • @osamabinladen824
      @osamabinladen824 5 лет назад +2

      @@jordans123ful Yep. Music is bound within us.

  • @igornebov
    @igornebov 8 лет назад +18

    Wow. I never knew that re-entry plasma is SO looks like plasma in Kerbal Splace Program. Well done, Squad.

    • @SkyChaserCom
      @SkyChaserCom 8 лет назад

      And you can see the plasma filimentation!

    • @Guitarfollower22
      @Guitarfollower22 8 лет назад

      sarcasm? because in vanilla KSP it looks like just heat

    • @igornebov
      @igornebov 8 лет назад

      +Guitarfollower22 it is NOT about long plasma tale. Look at flame structure and compare with atmospheric entry plume in stock KSP.
      It's same!

    • @billgamelson705
      @billgamelson705 8 лет назад

      Usually simulators are designed to simulate the real thing.

    • @jamegumb880
      @jamegumb880 8 лет назад

      Kerbal Space Program is a simulation of spaceflight just like on the planet Kerbal?

  • @Schatzipuffi
    @Schatzipuffi 3 года назад +1

    When rhe main-parachuts deploy, it's such a nice event. Absolutely great moments ... you guys from the NASA. THANK YOU ...

  • @PassiveSmoking
    @PassiveSmoking 8 лет назад +22

    This is way better if you play the Stargate music from 2001: A Space Odyssey over the top of it.

  • @vind3x
    @vind3x 9 лет назад +4

    Absolutely majestic, and even more of you think that's what meteors experiment (ok, a portion) when they reach our planet :D our beautiful gas shield... I'm simply amazed now. The plasma tail and the speed factors are the best!

  • @qpwodkgh2010
    @qpwodkgh2010 11 месяцев назад

    Some day, seeing this will be routine.

  • @tabbycat6458
    @tabbycat6458 3 года назад +2

    What an awesome amazing sight God bless America

  • @laylaal-otaibi8321
    @laylaal-otaibi8321 6 лет назад +7

    SubhanAllah, the view from space to the Earth's atmosphere really breathtaking, oh God a great creator

    • @virtuel5261
      @virtuel5261 4 года назад +1

      This is the beauty of creation.
      We cant even begin to imagine the beauty of the Creator

  • @justjackm8
    @justjackm8 7 лет назад +1

    Don’t know why but I can’t stop watching this video it’s just mesmerising

  • @savedbygodsgrace.9058
    @savedbygodsgrace.9058 6 лет назад +4

    Totally enjoyed every moment, thanks for posting the event.

  • @treechoper21
    @treechoper21 8 лет назад +27

    The plasma looks amazing

  • @Chalkyb7
    @Chalkyb7 3 года назад

    I can’t find anything other than beautiful, positive comments for this RUclips video… not sure I could say that often ✌🏽

  • @MrDaddynomates
    @MrDaddynomates 8 лет назад +227

    please people. On these videos of science and space travel. please stop feeding the trolls.

    • @mentilly_all
      @mentilly_all 7 лет назад +11

      Chris Ward
      there's no room for questioning in science.

    • @tonymind308
      @tonymind308 6 лет назад +8

      Chris Ward front camera not possible due to plasma trail. Remember!? 😂

    • @jakefrierson3983
      @jakefrierson3983 6 лет назад +12

      So tempting to snap at them, but not worth it. Let them fantasize.

    • @AnthonyElsom
      @AnthonyElsom 6 лет назад +6

      guilty as charged,..but I just LOVE kicking trolls asses...

    • @AnthonyElsom
      @AnthonyElsom 6 лет назад

      Antonius I meant 'feeding the trolls' by kicking their asses....
      '

  • @dunwoodie27
    @dunwoodie27 3 года назад +5

    I’d love to go to space and see the amazing planetary world that’s outside of our solar system. That would be amazing!

    • @theproudsoutherner587
      @theproudsoutherner587 2 года назад +2

      Some believe that when you die God let's you explore every inch of the universe and observe his creation I look forward to it

    • @dunwoodie27
      @dunwoodie27 2 года назад +1

      @@theproudsoutherner587 I’m looking forward to that when it’s my time. So beautiful

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад +1

      @@dunwoodie27 finally. a religious, non-conspiracy theorist person in the comments

  • @ralphf8951
    @ralphf8951 4 года назад +2

    Incredible, everyone involved a big thank you! Keep going!!!

  • @Phar2Rekliss
    @Phar2Rekliss 6 лет назад +6

    They need to share finally the pilot view reentry for the space shuttle!

    • @srinitaaigaura
      @srinitaaigaura 2 года назад

      There are many videos actually on YT of the complete landing.

  • @mrsherlock4182
    @mrsherlock4182 Год назад +3

    This is how the chicxulub asteroid feel 65.000.000 years ago 😂

  • @vapeurdepisse
    @vapeurdepisse Год назад +1

    Love that space voice. What a classic

  • @eardrumbuzz2636
    @eardrumbuzz2636 10 лет назад +4

    The main chutes look awesome!

    • @dxtrty
      @dxtrty 10 лет назад

      Yeah, but it annoys me that one of the chutes have a different pattern than the other two ;)

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm 9 лет назад +1

      gt_magnus Actually, all three of them are different. It's probably so it's easier to tell how the capsule is oriented as it comes down. You can still see the pattern on the chutes even if you can't make out any details on the spacecraft.

    • @jawoody9745
      @jawoody9745 9 лет назад

      gt_magnus Why???

    • @diggerpete9334
      @diggerpete9334 9 лет назад +1

      Gt_magnus maybe you have ocd, lol

  • @gavinmackie5185
    @gavinmackie5185 9 лет назад +10

    Wonderful video. Thanks Tanks.

  • @kevinnoble6320
    @kevinnoble6320 8 месяцев назад +1

    THE EARTH IS TRULY AMAZING

  • @xavichuvy9047
    @xavichuvy9047 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks for the Celsius and km/h convertion notes.

  • @matthiasbalke9089
    @matthiasbalke9089 5 лет назад +12

    Damn NASA. They poked a hole in the glass dome.

  • @iffatsharminislam7978
    @iffatsharminislam7978 4 года назад +2

    I must say, it's an amazing feeling for astronauts while sky changed to blue from black in front of them... When they entered into earth... It's an amazing feelings...

  • @hawkeye0248
    @hawkeye0248 8 лет назад +31

    "Orion has driven a golden spike" ..... nah, that spike was driven long time ago by Apollo.

    • @argon7624
      @argon7624 8 лет назад +6

      But this is the first capsule to go past one of the van-Allen radiation belts since Apollo. Not to mention that they created the first 5m heat shield that is theorized to be able to survive re-entry from planetary space

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 6 лет назад +1

      Exactly. Borman, Lovell, and Anders drove the golden spike in 1968.

    • @welshpete12
      @welshpete12 5 лет назад

      It's a quote from the last connection made , when the Transamerica railway was made !

  • @ssimon64
    @ssimon64 6 лет назад +19

    Those main shutes look like those old peppermint candies

    • @MrDavidh4
      @MrDavidh4 5 лет назад

      I thought the EXACT same thing!

    • @nirmalsiva1
      @nirmalsiva1 4 года назад

      Hahaha. True

    • @Bob-gn8ph
      @Bob-gn8ph Год назад

      That's because anybody who believe this stuff is a sucker

  • @solwretep
    @solwretep 9 месяцев назад +1

    The speaker @1 minute and 14 sec: "Travelling at about 20000 mph, so maybe 4% of the velocity of a spacecraft returning from the moon".
    This is wrong, the record speed of any human in space is 24791 mph, so it's actually travelling at about the same speed (and not 20 times faster than that as stated in the video).

  • @RRC6490
    @RRC6490 5 лет назад +3

    The music though... 🙇🏻‍♂️😌😌

  • @edgarvanbin3040
    @edgarvanbin3040 9 лет назад +4

    Great!Wonderful!
    I wish this spacecraft many successful missions!

  • @JasonF314
    @JasonF314 3 года назад +2

    The math, the science… amazing what these geniuses do to make this happen . How are there so many dislikes ???!!

    • @_K3PLR
      @_K3PLR 3 года назад +4

      Some people deny these achievements.

    • @trentbateman
      @trentbateman 2 года назад +1

      @@_K3PLR China

  • @revpitty001
    @revpitty001 5 лет назад +17

    Who else is fighting with there phone trying to watch this the right way up?

    • @sida_risa
      @sida_risa 4 года назад

      Gah, damn video orientation.

    • @Kharnellius
      @Kharnellius 4 года назад

      Your phone doesn't have an orientation lock?

  • @chanel-5397
    @chanel-5397 5 лет назад +3

    That was so very awesome & super amazing!

  • @GamingHelp
    @GamingHelp 2 года назад +2

    I've always wanted to see a video like this of the actual plasma tail from the inside. Outstanding video!

  • @indoscience467
    @indoscience467 7 лет назад +4

    So beautiful and awesome...
    Then you find out the heat shield cracked. ☹️

  • @Despond
    @Despond 8 лет назад +11

    Just one planet among near infinite. Spectacular to watch but slightly saddening knowing there's so much out there that we cannot visit, so much we still don't know and such a short lifespan.

    • @ghostfox2473
      @ghostfox2473 7 лет назад +1

      Despond very true and very deep. This is what I have devoted my life to. I will go to space in my life time, and I am working towards that goal. I have spent my short 17 year long life trying to find a cheap and efficient way to reach LOE and have a few possible solutions already that may make a ticket to space cost as little as $10000 per person. Which seems like slot but in comparison to the most efficient rocket we have today that can transport 1lb of material into orbit for around the same price.

    • @mentilly_all
      @mentilly_all 7 лет назад +1

      Brett The Crafter
      look at the "craters" on the moon, naive 17 year old..
      see if you can figure out what i want you to be able to clearly see about those alleged "meteor impact craters"...

    • @snakepliskin23
      @snakepliskin23 6 лет назад +1

      mentilly all more likely to have been caused by a boil burst effect

    • @Bob-gn8ph
      @Bob-gn8ph Год назад +1

      ​@@snakepliskin23the Moon is small and close and those Moon craters probably happened during the flood when The Fountains of the deep burst open.......Luke 21,36 KJV ❤

  • @pullyourluck
    @pullyourluck 6 лет назад +1

    absolutely fascinating....see the main chutes deploy and then when they completely open up to slow it down......WONDERFUL!!!

  • @kc5hgv
    @kc5hgv 9 лет назад +21

    It's the best ship ever for long missions. The Apollo program proved it. The Capsule is back very good design now with new computer power and electronics.

    • @deltaflyer1997
      @deltaflyer1997 9 лет назад +1

      +nutsackmania This one is big it holds seven people I think

    • @kc5hgv
      @kc5hgv 9 лет назад

      From what I have heard that they are developing a engine to reach Mars in 3 months. It would be nice if they could use a Shuttle design to give the crew some room during the trip. A lot of other things to think about like the radiation in space.

    • @kc5hgv
      @kc5hgv 9 лет назад

      Yep I guess that is true and they also have to solve the radiation problem as well. One day they will figure this out but not in my lifetime...

    • @dontreplykillyourself8816
      @dontreplykillyourself8816 9 лет назад

      +Kevin Hagen I know what you're talking about with the ISS! In fact, didn't they use some kind of reusable spaceplane to launch, assemble and supply it?

    • @gunner4q
      @gunner4q 8 лет назад

      the 'capsule' is best because of the forward facing large round ablative heat shield...everything behind it is protected..best design..

  • @adventureairinc7355
    @adventureairinc7355 5 лет назад +3

    and today, almost five years later: Nobody has gone anywhere with Orion. No Orion, no SLS flying anwhere as yet. And most probably never will.

  • @PompeyMatt17
    @PompeyMatt17 2 года назад +1

    this is EFT-1 unmanned test flight, but yes imagine all that unfolding before your very eyes as you return...

  • @eligeidel9357
    @eligeidel9357 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you Airbus for this great spacecraft!

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS 7 лет назад +502

    Proof the Earth is concave lol

    • @nickgentile8062
      @nickgentile8062 7 лет назад +66

      It's actually a donut. NASA only shows you the part of the donut we're familiar with. That's why it looks concave.

    • @marshja56
      @marshja56 7 лет назад +73

      The donuts I am familiar with are usually jelly filled. They start off round, become concave in sections and then gradually disappear entirely.

    • @bobalobalie
      @bobalobalie 7 лет назад +20

      +Mr. March Earth being a jelly filled donut and your assertion of how the donut Earth meet's it's demise is quite accurate. Just takes about 7.6 billion years for the Sun to indulge in the savory donuts of the lard filled donut called Mercury, the cream filled donut called Venus, and the jelly filled donut called Earth. Click the link below and read 'Red Giant Stage' and 'Post Red-Giant Stage'. While substituting the Sun for a morbidly obese, red headed, American woman who just won the lotto. Then goes directly to the donut store, eats, get's guilty, then purges herself....... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Future_of_Earth#Red_giant_stage

    • @dervaish3379
      @dervaish3379 7 лет назад +6

      DANG JOS: Dude, they were upside down, that's why.

    • @recoilrob324
      @recoilrob324 7 лет назад

      The capsule is coming in at a slight angle, and also is weighted off center a little bit.....so if the thrusters turn it around the center axis it changes the direction it flys. That's how they steer it down to the landing point so precisely.

  • @ichkanndichsehen_younow
    @ichkanndichsehen_younow 3 года назад

    Wow. Was für eine Perfektion.! Der erste Kontakt mit der Atmosphäre muss ein unglaubliches Gefühl sein.

  • @davidrush8283
    @davidrush8283 8 лет назад +12

    not to windy on the strings below parachutes

  • @michaelmorin2670
    @michaelmorin2670 2 года назад +4

    I found the effect of the fisheye lens bending the earth the wrong way interesting.

  • @888AshLi
    @888AshLi 6 лет назад +1

    I like how it's spoken about the aircrafts: "homecoming" etc. Sounds like speaking about a good friend or relative. :)

  • @babababatunde5000
    @babababatunde5000 6 лет назад +15

    It hurts to be awake. It's depressing.

    • @hugo511
      @hugo511 5 лет назад

      whaat?

    • @majorpain4570
      @majorpain4570 5 лет назад

      👀👀👀👀👀👀 is what he means

    • @hugo511
      @hugo511 5 лет назад

      Joey Villarreal I don’t think he has 12 eyes

  • @patman0250
    @patman0250 9 лет назад +6

    omg that fire looks like a figure like an angel with wings or devil with wings lol but I choose to believe its an angel looking after the people onboard making sure they are going to be ok :)

    • @snviper
      @snviper 9 лет назад +2

      Noone onboard...

    • @WootTootZoot
      @WootTootZoot 9 лет назад +1

      +patman0250 plasma, not fire.

    • @patman0250
      @patman0250 7 лет назад

      technically its the same bro

    • @patman0250
      @patman0250 7 лет назад

      nope there was 2 people in there ..

    • @DrewDifinity
      @DrewDifinity 7 лет назад

      It's actually the exact shape of the Spacecraft

  • @BTMONE
    @BTMONE 2 года назад +1

    Wow, look at that horizon...so beautiful and perfect.

    • @alexanderbrown2717
      @alexanderbrown2717 2 года назад

      Jesus is perfect 👍✝️♥️ruclips.net/video/Tb3Q4nRQjVY/видео.html

    • @ShieldStun
      @ShieldStun 2 года назад +2

      Your forgot "straight"

    • @mactallica9293
      @mactallica9293 2 года назад +1

      @@ShieldStun horizon only works on a sphere. Unless you think that's always the edge of earth

  • @SUPERTROYANO666
    @SUPERTROYANO666 10 лет назад +4

    Feliz Navidad Tanks in Space

  • @jonahlasvegas
    @jonahlasvegas 9 лет назад +96

    4000 degrees??? what temp does glass melt at? some awesome windows in that orion

    • @diggerpete9334
      @diggerpete9334 9 лет назад +95

      The glass is not taking the air buffering of the frontal heat shield but is positioned away in the slip stream which is far cooler.

    • @whopperlover1772
      @whopperlover1772 9 лет назад +39

      Peter is right. The heat shield takes the heat and deflects it away from the spacecraft.

    • @diggerpete9334
      @diggerpete9334 8 лет назад +6

      +ByteMe thank you if you notice when landing it is the rear of the spacecraft the camera is positioned. The parachutes display that the camera is not anywhere in the heat of re-entry..

    • @whopperlover1772
      @whopperlover1772 8 лет назад +17

      And another thing, checkout this picture :
      www.collectspace.com/images/news-120814a/021-lg.jpg
      The windows are set into the spacecraft. So not only is the heat shield taking the brunt of the heat and impact away from the spacecraft, but the windows are inset.

    • @trespire
      @trespire 8 лет назад +2

      +jonah jones Probably use a material other than glass for the lens cover or even the lenses themselves. Sapphire can withstand very high temperatures & pressures, so can diamond. Of course these would be the synthetic variety, still expensive items.

  • @ivoryjohnson4662
    @ivoryjohnson4662 11 месяцев назад

    I have lost count of the times I have watched this

  • @williamrose9683
    @williamrose9683 5 лет назад +6

    This is fantastic news to watch and secondly see in my life time.
    I grew up as a child watching all of the Gemini launch programs as well as watching all the Apollo launches.
    Of course, I had to experience all of the space shuttle programs as well as all the future new rockets they are experimenting right now. These are very exciting times, which I’m going to miss, since I’m dying of cancer right now, which I may have a year or less to live right now.
    When I die, I would like the almighty creator of our splendid universe give me a guided tour of our vast havens and Beyond.
    Since I’m at peace of dying, I’m looking forward to meeting our almighty creator.
    I’m wondering if we’re in a different time Dimension, or if are soul goes somewhere else. Exciting times are still ahead for myself.

    • @josephgahagan4692
      @josephgahagan4692 5 лет назад

      God speed William. You don't have any reason to be scared. Jesus will be there to catch you brother. And you will be rewarded for your faith. Energy can not be destroyed only transformed. Science has spent thousands of years trying to figure out what your going to discover in minutes.

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 Год назад

      Hope you have a wonderful 365 days ahead of you. Live them to the fullest. ❤