Dragon Reentry

SpaceX Dragon spacecraft have started splashing down in the Pacific Ocean off of San Diego. Tonight there was a Cargo Dragon coming back from the International Space Station and its track brought it in from the northwest to the southeast, following the California coast and coming right over Los Angeles at about 10″35 PM.

I was thinking of shooting a Facebook Live video, but the Dragon came over Castle Peak a minute or two earlier than I had expected and it was going a LOT faster than I expected. I’m used to seeing ISS going over and it can take close to ten minutes to go from horizon to horizon if it’s going straight overhead. Dragon took 1:29. It was slower after breaking using atmospheric drag, but it was also MUCH lower.

Dragon had a long, colorful tail, not unlike a SpaceX Falcon launch, but missing the exhaust trail that a launch will leave.

These first three pictures were taken about 4-5 seconds apart – that spacecraft was making tracks!

Once it got down toward the southern horizon, somewhere south of Long Beach and near Oceanside, the trail faded as the spacecraft slowed further and the parachutes came out.

But the show wasn’t over. The other thing that was expected since we were nearly right under the path was a sonic boom. As it went over the Dragon was doing WELL over Mach 1, and about 2:34 after the Dragon faded from view, a LOUD Boom-Boom, double sonic boom rattled the windows. Outside it was quite noticable – it was heard even inside the house, as The Long Suffering Wife came out to make sure that I hadn’t tripped and fallen and slammed into the door or wall. No tripping, no crashing, just spacecraft returning to Earth.

1 Comment

Filed under Photography, Space

One response to “Dragon Reentry

  1. Pingback: Resiliences Mond / PUNCH für alle / PSLV versagt | Skyweek Zwei Punkt Null

Please join the discussion, your comments are encouraged!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.