Parachutes deploy
Parachutes have been deployed to help slow the rapid descent of the spacecraft ahead of splashdown.
After their historic lunar flyby, the crew safely splashed down in the Pacific.
NASA's Artemis II mission lifted off on April 1 at 6:35 p.m. ET from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The four-person crew completed a 695,081-mile, 10-day journey around the moon, also known as a lunar fly-by.
A "textbook" splashdown took place at 8:07 p.m. ET on Friday, April 10.
Parachutes have been deployed to help slow the rapid descent of the spacecraft ahead of splashdown.
After an expected 6-minute blackout, NASA has regained communications with the crew.
Orion has reentered the Earth's atmosphere at an altitude of 400,000 feet, reaching peak heating and speed as it travels nearly 35 times the speed of sound.
The reentry also marks the start of a planned 6-minute communications blackout. The friction and compression of the atmosphere as Orion falls creates a plasma bubble that will engulf the spacecraft, not allowing radio signals in or out.

Orion performed a brief raise burn -- a firing of the thrusters -- that fine-tunes the reentry angle of the spacecraft to minimize the time the heat shield will experience high temperatures.