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A SpaceX capsule has splashed down safely off California in an emergency return to Earth due to one crew member’s serious medical condition.
The Crew Dragon capsule — dubbed Endeavour — parachuted into the Pacific Ocean off San Diego after midnight on Thursday, capping a 10-hour-plus descent from the International Space Station (ISS) and fiery re-entry through Earth’s atmosphere.
Their return — a few weeks ahead of schedule — marked the first time NASA has cut an ISS mission short due to a health emergency.
During a collaborative NASA-SpaceX webcast, live infrared footage captured the moment two sets of parachutes unfurled from the nose of the descending capsule. These parachutes significantly reduced the descent speed to approximately 25 km/h before the capsule softly splashed into the ocean.
In a radio transmission to the SpaceX flight control centre near Los Angeles, Endeavour’s commander, NASA astronaut Zena Cardman, was heard saying: “It’s good to be home.”
Joining her on the flight home were fellow US astronaut Mike Fincke, Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platonov.
They arrived together at the space station following a launch to orbit from Florida in August and departed Wednesday afternoon on a 10-and-a-half-hour journey home, ending a 167-day mission.
On January 8, NASA made the call to return all four crew members ahead of schedule. NASA administrator Jared Isaacman explained that the decision was prompted by one astronaut experiencing a “serious medical condition” necessitating urgent medical care once back on Earth.
NASA officials have not identified which of the crew was experiencing a medical issue or described its nature, citing privacy concerns.
Fincke, a retired air force colonel who was the station’s designated commander, and Cardman, a rookie astronaut and geobiologist, had been scheduled to conduct a six-hour-plus spacewalk last week to install hardware outside the station.
The spacewalk was cancelled on 7 January over what NASA then characterised as a “medical concern” with an astronaut.
NASA chief health and medical officer James Polk later said the medical emergency did not involve “an injury that occurred in the pursuit of operations”.