FLORIDA — One of the four Crew-8 members had a “medical issue” after splashing down off the coast of Florida early Friday morning and all of them were flown to a hospital, where one remains, according to NASA.


What You Need To Know

  • No additional information was provided such as who the astronaut is except the person is in stable condition

  • It took Crew-8 more than 30 hours before splashing down off of Florida's coast

  • It was a long and wild ride home, with intense speeds and temperatures

NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, and Jeanette Epps, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin returned home in SpaceX’s Dragon space capsule Endeavour near Pensacola at around 3:29 a.m. ET to the cheers of NASA and SpaceX teams heard during a live feed.

As Endeavour was floating in the Gulf Coast, crews raced in fast boats to inspect the spacecraft before towing it to SpaceX’s recovery vessel Megan before it scooped up the capsule.

Once on board, all four space travelers got out of the capsule to waves before being inspected by medical personnel.

They were supposed to be taken by helicopter to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. However, they were taken to Ascension Sacred Heart Pensacola in Florida after it was discovered one of the four experienced a medical issue. All four were flown to the hospital. 

“After medical evaluation at the hospital, three of the crew members departed Pensacola and have arrived at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston,” NASA stated in a new press release Friday afternoon. “The one astronaut who remains at Ascension is in stable condition under observation as a precautionary measure. To protect the crew member’s medical privacy, specific details on the individual’s condition or identity will not be shared.”

In a previous news release by NASA’s Office of Communications News Chief Cheryl Warner, it was stated that “the crew exited the Dragon spacecraft onto a recovery ship for standard post-flight medical evaluations. Out of an abundance of caution, all crew members were flown to the facility together.”

No additional information was provided such as who the astronaut was or his or her conditions.

Spectrum News reached out to NASA for comment and the U.S. space agency has not yet replied back.

Early Friday morning, Crew-8 returned to Earth in a splashdown off the coast of Florida after spending seven months onboard the International Space Station conducting experiments.

 

Crew-8 members NASA astronauts Cmdr. Matthew Dominick, pilot Michael Barratt, and mission specialists Jeanette Epps and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin take a moment to pose for a photo while inside SpaceX's Dragon space capsule. One of them experienced a medial issue after splashdown on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024, and was flown to Ascension Sacred Heart Pensacola in Florida. (NASA)

 

Estimated Splashdown Countdown

 

The ride back home

SpaceX Dragon specs:

  • Height: 26.7 feet tall

  • Diameter: 13 feet fall

  • Number of engines: 8

  • Passengers: It can carry up to 7 people

  • Parachutes: 2 drogue + 4 main = 6 parachutes

The Dragon was fully autonomous from the moment it undocked from Harmony to the splashdown, yet the crew could take control if needed.

"After performing a series of departure burns to move away from the space station, Dragon will conduct multiple orbit-lowering maneuvers, jettison the trunk, and re-enter Earth’s atmosphere for splashdown off the coast of Florida approximately 34 hours later on Friday, October 25," explained SpaceX and NASA.

And it was one heck of a ride. Using a series of parachute deployments, the Dragon slowed down from an orbital speed of about 17,500 mph (2,816 kph) to 350 mph (482 kph) to about 16 mph (25 kph) when it softly landed off the coast of Florida.

And things were a bit toasty for the Dragon has it experienced temperatures of 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit (1,927 degrees Celsius) once it entered Earth’s atmosphere, but special shielding and the air conditioning system kept the crew safe and cool.

As the Dragon was screaming over, some lucky people may have heard a sonic boom.

Learn all about sonic booms here.

Trying to return home

Crew-8 members NASA astronauts Cmdr. Matthew Dominick, pilot Michael Barratt, and mission specialists Jeanette Epps and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin took off from Launch Complex 39A at the Kennedy Space Center back in March.

They spent their time conducting a series of experiments, but they were originally supposed to return home in August, but the mission was extended several times, especially as NASA investigated Boeing’s troubled Starliner capsule.  

What was supposed to be an eightish-day mission for Starliner’s Cmdr. Barry “Butch” Wilmore and pilot Sunita “Suni” Williams in June turned into a months-long odyssey as their craft suffered from thruster issues and helium leaks.

NASA kept pushing their stay on the ISS as engineers launched an investigation, which resulted in the Crew-8 staying onboard longer in case an emergency occurred, where Wilmore and Williams would have needed SpaceX’s Dragon to return home.

Eventually, the Starliner returned home without its crew. And Crew-9, which was launched to the ISS last month, will return to Earth with the Starliner pair in February 2025.

Williams was made commander of Expedition 72. An expedition means the current crew in the International Space Station.

And the International Space Station has gotten crowded these last few months. Usually it holds about seven people, plus any guests who plan on being there for a short time. But between the Starliner crew, Crew-8, Crew-9 and Soyuz MS-25, there are a total of 11 people.

NASA and SpaceX were set to see Crew-8 undock on Sunday, Oct. 13, and splashing down on Monday, Oct. 14, but Hurricane Milton changed their plans.

Other undocking dates were issued — Oct. 18, Oct. 20 and Oct. 21 — but weather conditions were unfavorable for the different splashdown zones.

Late on Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 22, NASA stated that the new undocking date was Wednesday, Oct. 23.

However, poor weather was still a concern for undocking, with the U.S. space agency recently considering Tuesday night for the undocking. But as of Tuesday afternoon, the new date was given Wednesday, Oct. 23, but it all depended on the weather conditions.

“Forecasters have seen improvement in expected weather at some of the landing sites off the coast of Florida and continue to monitor conditions while considering splashdown sites and exact timing. The next weather briefing is scheduled for 9 a.m., Wednesday,” NASA stated.

Before this new undocking date was announced, NASA stated that depending on the time of the undocking and other factors like weather conditions, it could have taken between six to 39 hours for the Crew-8 to return to Earth.

For a long time, NASA did not reveal which of the various splash zones Crew-8 would be landing in because they had to monitor the weather forecast, but in the end, the Endeavour returned to Earth near Pensacola after Crew-8 undocked from the International Space Station at 5:05 p.m. ET, Wednesday.

At around 3:24 p.m. ET, the hatch between SpaceX Dragon’s spacecraft and the space station closed as the crew and the team back down on Earth went over a series of check lists before leaving.

Follow the Dragon

Watch the splashdown

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