Hawthorne-Based SpaceX Dragon Splashes Down Off California Coast

The first private spacecraft to dock with the International Space Station returns to Earth Thursday

By Jonathan Lloyd and Annette Arreola
|  Thursday, May 31, 2012  |  Updated 3:20 PM PDT
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Mission control celebrated Thursday when the Dragon spacecraft built by Hawthorne-based SpaceX splashed down off the coast of California. Annette Arreola reports from Hawthorne for the NBC4 News at Noon at May 31, 2012.

Mission control celebrated Thursday when the Dragon spacecraft built by Hawthorne-based SpaceX splashed down off the coast of California. Annette Arreola reports from Hawthorne for the NBC4 News at Noon at May 31, 2012.

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Mission control members react with applause as Hawthorne-based SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft arrives at the space station. Raw Video

SpaceX Carries SoCal Students' Experiments

Students from Chaminade College Preparatory School and San Marino High School are making history as their experiments travel into space aboard the first privately-funded spacecraft, Dragon from Hawthorn-based company SpaceX. The students are experimenting with fermentation and fungi, and beat out hundreds of students nationwide for the opportunity. Lolita Lopez reports for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on May 25, 2012.
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A spacecraft built by Hawthorne-based SpaceX splashed down off the California coast Thursday after becoming the first private spacecraft to dock with the International Space Station.

The vehicle -- known as Dragon -- was unberthed from the station at 1:07 a.m. PT,  according to NASA. Dragon was then released from the station's Canadarm2  robotic arm at 2:49 a.m. and executed a series of burns and maneuvers to  move beyond the station's 656-foot "keep out sphere'' before beginning its  journey back to Earth, according to NASA.

SpaceX mission controllers ran the craft through about five hours  of orbital maneuvers before performing a "de-orbit burn,'' which  brought Dragon back into the Earth's atmosphere.

Three chutes deployed at about 8:38 a.m. to slow the spacecraft's descent. At about 8:44 a.m., word came from mission control that "Dragon is in the water."

The splashdown was hundreds of miles off the coast.

It will take a few days to transport the capsule by barge to Los Angeles. From there, it will be trucked to the SpaceX rocket factory in Texas for unloading and inspection.

Dragon's mission, which began May 22 with a blast-off from Cape  Canaveral in Florida, is part of a first-of-its-kind partnership between NASA  and SpaceX to transport cargo to and from the stellar outpost during the post- space shuttle era. Dragon docked with the space station Friday, and astronauts aboard the station spent the past  few days unloading 1,014 pounds of cargo carried by the ship during its  demonstration flight.

The spacecraft also carried experiments by students from Chaminade College Preparatory School and San Marino High School. The students are experimenting with fermentation and fungi, and beat out hundreds of students nationwide for the opportunity.

SpaceX conducted a test flight in December 2010, when the company became  the first commercial firm to send a spacecraft into low-Earth orbit and  recover it successfully.

If the Dragon makes a successful return to Earth, SpaceX will begin what  is expected to be more than a dozen flights to the station. SpaceX executives  said the Dragon craft is also designed to carry astronauts, but only cargo  missions are planned for now.

The company's CEO, chief technology officer and co-founder is 40-year- old South African-born engineer and entrepreneur Elon Musk, who also co-founded  Tesla Motors, which manufactures all-electric sports cars, and what later  became PayPal. 

"Launch, docking, reentry and recovery successful,'' Musk said in a statement provided by the company. "Welcome home, baby.''

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Posted May 31, 2012
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