ocean-landing
art SpaceX Falcon 9 Booster Landing on OCISLY
My rendition of a Falcon 9 booster landing on Of Course I Still Love You, SpaceX’s East coast droneship. This is a triple-engine landing burn; while SpaceX hasn’t performed a triple-engine landing burn since JCSAT-16, very heavy GTO payloads at the edge of Falcon 9’s capability may require triple-engine landing burns in the future.
Read more (1 min)infographic Blue Origin New Glenn Landing (Draft) Direct link
This is the approximate trajectory of the Blue Origin New Glenn booster during a launch.
The New Glenn booster will be recovered on every mission.
Read more (1 min)infographic SpaceX Dragon 2 Landing Direct link
This is the approximate trajectory of the SpaceX Dragon 2 as it lands on Earth after a trip to the ISS.
infographic SpaceX Falcon 9 Downrange Propulsive Landing (No Boostback) Direct link
This is the approximate trajectory of the SpaceX Falcon 9 booster during a downrange propulsive landing (i.e. ocean landing) on the ASDS.
Note that this is the trajectory of a booster during a high-performance mission, and does not include a boostback burn. The approximate trajectory of a Falcon 9 landing with a boostback burn can be seen here.
Read more (2 min)infographic SpaceX Falcon 9 Downrange Propulsive Landing Direct link
This is the approximate trajectory of the SpaceX Falcon 9 booster during a downrange propulsive landing (i.e. ocean landing) on the ASDS.
Note that this profile includes a boostback burn; this profile was used during the launch of CRS-8, among others. It’s not used with heavy payloads, such as some of the larger GTO missions; instead, the booster does not perform a boostback burn and ends up much farther downrange, requiring the ASDS to position itself much farther from shore. The approximate trajectory of a Falcon 9 landing without a boostback burn can be seen here.
Read more (2 min)