"In a skip entry, you come into the atmosphere at a shallower angle, then you skip back out into space and come back in again. It's kind of like when you skip stones on a lake." 😮Great 🎉
The Oscar for best camera operator goes to, whoever operated or programmed the operation. Of this shot. They caught everything perfectly, even down to the parachutes disconnecting in sequence. Well done.
I just can't get over how insanely fast it's going to make the ground appear to move so much. It's going 7000 mph faster than the ISS at 17000 mph. Coming in HOT 🔥
@@adamant365i listen to the sound and it totally not sped up also you can see it literally fly past atmosphere even atmosphere cant fully stop it so it fly veryyyy fast😅
@@THON176It quite clearly says “time lapse” in the title. Yes it reenters at high speed, but the full video (I’ve seen it) is 20+ minutes long. Edit: the last minute or so isn’t time lapse. But the majority of the video is.
In "Artemis 1," the spacecraft Orion returned to Earth. When it reached approximately 61,000 meters above the Earth, it temporarily resurfaced like a bouncing stone thrown on the surface of a lake. The purpose of this resurfacing was to adjust the landing site so that the team on the ground could retrieve it more reliably and quickly, and to relieve the gravity on the passengers by dispersing the heat and shock of atmospheric entry
@@elantrauma It may have the effect you describe, But the biggest advantage of skip entry is that by having it skip once in the atmosphere, it slows it down and allows the final angle of entry to be deeper than normal. The deeper entry angle has the effect of reducing glide time and making it easier to target the landing site
I was going to ask if they "Bounced" on the atmosphere, thanks for your comment! I was initially confused by the 2 times of visible heat, expecting one... /4 beers down and counting.
Now that’s what I call coming in hot. Literally and figuratively. Did you see how fast the horizon was rising in the window initially. Angle of attack was insane even though it’s sped up about 3x.
We could have had that moon base decades ago, if it wasn’t for Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” welfare scam, that enslaved generations of blacks to government handouts, and drained the public treasury ensuring a permanent deficit economy.
I love it when you can hear the RCS thrusters popping off and the sound of entry. And when you see the literal top of the atmosphere to give you scale as to show how f*&^g fast this craft is moving.
I was in church following the return of the Orion spacecraft and praying for its safe return. When I told everyone that Artemis I was home, the place erupted big time because everyone knew that Orion was home.
Lol lying is a sin right? Churches don't believe space exists, since there's a magical firmament or whatever that stops us from entering the "heaven's" 😆
If you’re talking about the white stuff at the very end after it splashes down, thought about that too. My hypothesis is - that spacecraft was still quite warm when it hit the water. The water evaporated from the hot windows, leaving the sea salt behind. Plus, it was sped up - so it looks much faster than it was. But I am not a rocket surgeon. Just an amateur speculating.
My first thought was frost. Re-entry heat may not have impacted that somewhat rear-facing window very significantly. And the cold of space and/or the cold in the upper atmosphere could be the cause, with the warming in the lower atmosphere not catching up, as it were.
Wow very interesting to see the shape of the atmosphere coming in looks anything except perfectly round as it appears from far out . Wow wasn't expecting that
I saw that too. I think it is just the thickness of the cloud cover compared to where their were less clouds. Lower pressure domes in the atmosphere and what nots.😊
You're close, those are RCS (Reaction Control System) hypergolic small thrusters firing, not to slow the craft down, but to keep it oriented at the optimal trajectory. Also notice there are two different moments of atmospheric reentry. The first bleeds off speed and then the RCS orients the craft to skip off the top of the atmosphere like a stone off water, and then point back down at a deeper/steeper angle to reenter in earnest. This helps bleed off extreme speed from coming back from the Moon but also makes it easier to point the craft at the desired touchdown location.
Absolutely amazing! Watching bits of it come off as it came through the atmosphere (I'm assuming it was part of the heat shield and was designed to degenerate; and what's all that clicking sound?
Those are the Reaction Control System (RCS) thrusters: 12 small hydrazine-powered rocket engines that fire for short intervals to keep the Orion crew module correctly oriented and stable during re-entry. Each thruster has solenoid-actuated valves that open and close to control hydrazine and oxidizer flows. The knocking sounds you hear are the valves opening and closing. Watch realtime version (25 minutes): th-cam.com/video/U88DzZcsubs/w-d-xo.html
It was done on Apollo as well. The first step is to bleed off trans lunar velocity in the thinner upper atmosphere before going in steeper to the deeper and denser parts atmosphere in the second step.
@@Kurzula5150 I wonder if with a large light shield it would be possible to surf the atmosphere and need no ablation at all. Of course it's a moot point once we have UFO disclosure
I’m wondering how hot is the temperature when the rocket is trying to re-entry the earth. The glass is pretty durable and heatproof ability is impressed me
Rumors were NASA wasn’t happy with the heat shield performance. Quite a bit of thruster fighting to keep the entry orientation. Heat shield modeling for atmospheric dynamics probably needed fine-tuning.
its crazy how the blackness of space slowly becomes a blueish atmosphere during reentry
The valves for the thrusters clacking are insane. Little microcorrections just about everywhere.
No. It's a time lapsed video. This is about 5x real speed
"Evidence"@@noobdernoobder6707
@noobdernoobder6707 look at.the description...it's 25 minutes sped up to only run for 7 minutes. Now don't you feel dump for popping off
@@rocketfamilykml2528 Not at all, have you actually seen the realtime version?
@@tacitblue1973 my comment applies to this video and that it os sped up and that the person I commented to doubts it Yada yada
The coolest part to me is how the capsule is steering itself by rolling from side to side.
"In a skip entry, you come into the atmosphere at a shallower angle, then you skip back out into space and come back in again. It's kind of like when you skip stones on a lake."
😮Great 🎉
I thought it was only my observation, they really skipped over the athmosphere! amazing
Thanks for explaining. I thought it was a video loop, never heard of that reentry before!
Cool, thanks again for clearing it up!
Fuel Fuel Fuel Fuel
That’s cool! Whats the point of it, like I’m assuming maybe to help slow?
@@mirandaroberts1831decreases peak heating and g-forces in exchange for a long period of heating and g-forces
The Oscar for best camera operator goes to, whoever operated or programmed the operation.
Of this shot. They caught everything perfectly, even down to the parachutes disconnecting in sequence.
Well done.
It's because it's all fake~
@@AndrewWhite6969 flat earther?
@@christianwheeler8386 Indubitably. And yourself?
I just can't get over how insanely fast it's going to make the ground appear to move so much. It's going 7000 mph faster than the ISS at 17000 mph. Coming in HOT 🔥
True it is moving very quickly, but also realize this video is at approximately 3x speed.
@@ImproveConditions CLICK CLICKCLICK CLICK
This is timelapse
@@adamant365i listen to the sound and it totally not sped up also you can see it literally fly past atmosphere even atmosphere cant fully stop it so it fly veryyyy fast😅
@@THON176It quite clearly says “time lapse” in the title. Yes it reenters at high speed, but the full video (I’ve seen it) is 20+ minutes long.
Edit: the last minute or so isn’t time lapse. But the majority of the video is.
This might be the coolest thing I've ever seen
In "Artemis 1," the spacecraft Orion returned to Earth. When it reached approximately 61,000 meters above the Earth, it temporarily resurfaced like a bouncing stone thrown on the surface of a lake. The purpose of this resurfacing was to adjust the landing site so that the team on the ground could retrieve it more reliably and quickly, and to relieve the gravity on the passengers by dispersing the heat and shock of atmospheric entry
Isn't this a way to mitigate heating on the shield as well?
@@elantrauma It may have the effect you describe,
But the biggest advantage of skip entry is that by having it skip once in the atmosphere, it slows it down and allows the final angle of entry to be deeper than normal.
The deeper entry angle has the effect of reducing glide time and making it easier to target the landing site
deeper means steeper 🤔
I hear water…. 👂
I was going to ask if they "Bounced" on the atmosphere, thanks for your comment!
I was initially confused by the 2 times of visible heat, expecting one...
/4 beers down and counting.
Flat earthers punching air rn
Love the sound of the atmosphere coming in with the thruster solenoids going at it!
I suddenly feel snack-y. This totally sounds like me making popcorn in my glass-lid large pot.😂
Now that’s what I call coming in hot. Literally and figuratively. Did you see how fast the horizon was rising in the window initially. Angle of attack was insane even though it’s sped up about 3x.
Haulin ass!!
Crossing the entire N American continent in 20 seconds 😂 don't blink or you'll miss it
A great demonstration of Engineering, design and execution. Getting closer and closer to our next step of creating a permanent base on the moon .❤
Just send me up, I don't care if I come back. I don't need a moon base, just a lift.
Oh it's already there. Been there for ages
Weren't they supposed to go
We could have had that moon base decades ago, if it wasn’t for Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” welfare scam, that enslaved generations of blacks to government handouts, and drained the public treasury ensuring a permanent deficit economy.
European Service Module seen burning up around 1:35
Thanks
Woww
Now THAT was EPIC in so many ways. Mind blown!
I love it when you can hear the RCS thrusters popping off and the sound of entry. And when you see the literal top of the atmosphere to give you scale as to show how f*&^g fast this craft is moving.
Amazing sounds.
Reminds me 3:33 of the voices in the portal room Dave Bowman entered at the end of 2001.
Say what??
I bet flat-earthers love this video.
😂
They reported that their offices around the globe are fuming.
@@aldovera3789Haaaaah!
Eles vão dizer que tudo isso é fake,filmes de Hollywood.🌎🤣🤣🤣
@@aldovera3789😂
This thing got safely down from Space... faster than it takes me to drive to the corner store... 1 mile away.
I was in church following the return of the Orion spacecraft and praying for its safe return. When I told everyone that Artemis I was home, the place erupted big time because everyone knew that Orion was home.
No you weren't.
@@penguin44ca Yes, I was.
r/thathappened
How much help was prayer in this?
Lol lying is a sin right? Churches don't believe space exists, since there's a magical firmament or whatever that stops us from entering the "heaven's" 😆
Never before have I heard the sound inside the capsule during reentry! Wonder what those window smudges are?
If you’re talking about the white stuff at the very end after it splashes down, thought about that too. My hypothesis is - that spacecraft was still quite warm when it hit the water. The water evaporated from the hot windows, leaving the sea salt behind. Plus, it was sped up - so it looks much faster than it was. But I am not a rocket surgeon. Just an amateur speculating.
I think they might be charred pieces of the ablative heat shield
@@robjohnson1138you can steam rise as the craft impacts with the water.
My first thought was frost. Re-entry heat may not have impacted that somewhat rear-facing window very significantly. And the cold of space and/or the cold in the upper atmosphere could be the cause, with the warming in the lower atmosphere not catching up, as it were.
Salt water evaporated
Wow this is a epic video!!!! 😲😱👍🙏
The thrusters sound like 🍿
Great video! What are all the thumping noises? Is it striking debris?
Thrusters firing.
Does sound travel faster in space or in water?
Water, sound doesn't travel in space
this is so amazing to watch!!!!! the wildest ride in the world
I would literally give my life to have this as the view from my cabin window.
Wish granted. Be careful what you wish for…. MwAHAHAHAHA
@@thomasducourantjr.6162 to paraphrase Dr. Yueh, you don't think I know what I've gained?
Wow very interesting to see the shape of the atmosphere coming in looks anything except perfectly round as it appears from far out . Wow wasn't expecting that
The flat earthers have the proof they have longed for
That’s because the camera is behind a thick curved window.
A thick curved piece of glass is literally just a lens, which distorts light.
@@joelmulderThis.
I saw that too. I think it is just the thickness of the cloud cover compared to where their were less clouds. Lower pressure domes in the atmosphere and what nots.😊
When it does those tick sounds and you see the flames move around differently is that the thursters slowing it down or?
You're close, those are RCS (Reaction Control System) hypergolic small thrusters firing, not to slow the craft down, but
to keep it oriented at the optimal trajectory. Also notice there are two different moments of atmospheric reentry. The first bleeds off speed and then the RCS orients the craft to skip off the top of the atmosphere like a stone off water, and then point back down at a deeper/steeper angle to reenter in earnest. This helps bleed off extreme speed from coming back from the Moon but also makes it easier to point the craft at the desired touchdown location.
@@dirtypure2023 thank you alot for this info very curious but not educated
@@letmebe100 welcome!
@@letmebe100 Spaceflight is a very deep subject
I think someone was knocking on the outside. Why didn't you let them in?
Honestly, this is no time to be making popcorn!
Absolutely amazing! Watching bits of it come off as it came through the atmosphere (I'm assuming it was part of the heat shield and was designed to degenerate; and what's all that clicking sound?
This is spectacular.
I wish this had been filmed with a 360-degree VR camera. The views in VR would have been spectacular.
What is the clicking sound?
I believe those were control thrusters firing during reentry.
The Real-time full re-entry version of 25:00 is so much better! ~ check out the Launch Pad video version.
A truly awesome sight..
Whats that little hole in centre of lense
Is the noise at the start spacebugs hitting the windscreen? [edit: Should have watched a bit longer... thrusters.]
RCS thrusters keeping the capsule oriented 😁
It’s sped up so it sounds weird.
Does anyone know what that clicking sound is when the spacecraft rolls?
Those are the Reaction Control System (RCS) thrusters: 12 small hydrazine-powered rocket engines that fire for short intervals to keep the Orion crew module correctly oriented and stable during re-entry. Each thruster has solenoid-actuated valves that open and close to control hydrazine and oxidizer flows. The knocking sounds you hear are the valves opening and closing.
Watch realtime version (25 minutes): th-cam.com/video/U88DzZcsubs/w-d-xo.html
fantastic !
This is so cool I don't know how I'm going to manage the rest of my workday.
This was multiple stages of slowing down? that's what I wondered if was possible as a way to cool the shield. has this been done before?
It was done on Apollo as well. The first step is to bleed off trans lunar velocity in the thinner upper atmosphere before going in steeper to the deeper and denser parts atmosphere in the second step.
@@Kurzula5150 I wonder if with a large light shield it would be possible to surf the atmosphere and need no ablation at all. Of course it's a moot point once we have UFO disclosure
I’m wondering how hot is the temperature when the rocket is trying to re-entry the earth. The glass is pretty durable and heatproof ability is impressed me
The window is on the rearside of the capsule, where it is quite cool.😅
Would we be able to visibly see this from the ground? Or would if be going to fast for us to see?
Space shuttles were clearly visible during reentry, although Orion is much smaller, I think you could see it too
Look at all that plasma!
Il modulo sembrava ricorrere la capsula con la nostra bsmbolotta ! Era un residuato del Jurassivo che correva sulle due zampette abbronzatissime??
What happens to the rest of the ship/Rocket that they float around in space go? Like what happens to it?
Most all of it either burns up in the atmosphere or impacts the ocean. Only the capsule returns safely
Thrusters makin a fire beat at 2:00
That was awesome!
Beautiful 🎉❤... amazing
Are these the guys who made those films
1:14 Cue the Artemis popcorn machine. 😁
That is absolutely beautiful ❤
Wow. That's awesome!
So amazing!! Just so mind-blowing that some men and women developed the technology to achieve such an awesome event.
So cool love this stuff
What would scare me the most is the noise that the craft makes
I was thinking that too lol
Beautiful and mesmerizing. No narration or musical score needed
What are those chunks that flake off and stick to the window? Edit: "Ablative heat shield" is the answer.
Is the black stuff coming off the ablative shield?
I highly doubt the chunks of insulation resting along the window ledge were intended…
@@MikeOxlong- Most of that is the shiny thermal coating burning off.
@@MikeOxlong-You'd be surprised how carefully engineered and thought out every aspect of these craft and missions are.
Rumors were NASA wasn’t happy with the heat shield performance. Quite a bit of thruster fighting to keep the entry orientation. Heat shield modeling for atmospheric dynamics probably needed fine-tuning.
That's an expensive way to make popcorn.
My popcorn almost ready at min 1:45
Holy shit cancel my ticket.
Amazing!
Посмотри видео спуска Олега Артемьева!Опять имитация?😮 Молодец,хорошо на клавиши нажимаешь
Wow! What a treat.
this is awesome!!!!
Imagine hanging on to the outside of this thing!!
You'd die 😢
Was everything about this reentry nominal?
As far as I'm aware it went splendidly
Splendid
It’s amazing that it doesn’t disintegrate on re entry.
Why would it? It has ablative heat shielding.
now I want some popcorn.
Me driving 80 mph, hitting a lot of bugs on windsheild! 🐛 😂
its amazing how dark it is outside Earth inside space, the Sun is the only thing that gives us light !!
2:15 could someone warn Elon that there's air in the radiator and the toilet is flushing? His machine's not up to scratch...
Flat earthers be like its A.I bro!
Unfortunately, the damage to the heat shield was so extensive that it may require a redesign.
The ticking sounds thrusters I take it
I wished one could have seen the instantaneous speed relative to the surrounding atmosphere.
What would that do
Amazing
sounds like popcorn popping in the microwave
When it comes through the clouds you can see a hole in it from the parachutes...😮
Very cool.
Sound of a toilet flushing. 2:09 NASA providing for passenger comforts during descent stage.
Sounds like NASA was popping popcorn or using an old printer! Lol
A very cool ride
There must be a popcorn machine in there
so THATS what re entry sounds like..
Seeing forming cones of superheated gas is amazing
why is it always a view from the back never the front ???
The front is where the heat shield is. Can't see through that.
@@logitech4873they have a window they look out ...heat shield is under it for reentry if im not mistaken.
good thought thanks.
Increíble
Waww no words
Weird how at 4:18 the earth deforms from that fisheye lense.
Sometimes it sounds like flushing down the toilet. 2:09 for example.
Coming in hot.
pretty cool.
Cavemen had no idea
I seen one drop straight in THEN slowly take on forward motion. I have a pretty good idea what we saw in the vid will soon be old school.
Kick ass 😎👍