The SRBs are jettisoned from the shuttle system at 2 minutes and an altitude of about 146,000 feet (44.5 km).
Approximately 130 nmi (240km) off the east coast of Florida.
The two white Solid Rocket boosters fall back into the sea and are re-used. The main engines are on the shuttle itself which of course is used many times.
The two white solid rocket boosters fall off after 2 minutes and parachute back to the Atlantic ocean. The external tank burns up in the atmosphere.
The solid rocket boosters are jettisoned as their fuel runs out. Their fall is slowed by parachutes and they are later recovered and returned to the Kennedy Space Center for refurbishing and reuse on later missions.
The twin rocket boosters (two white ones) fall into the Atlantic ocean just East of Cape Canaveral, Florida after about 8 minutes of flight. The external tank (big orange one) falls off in space a while after. The twin rocket boosters are retrieved by two carrier type ships near Kennedy Space Center. The two boosters are the reused, but the external is not. Little known fact, all the external tank does is hold the liquid oxygen and other prepellents, it is the twin boosters and orbiters which do all the work! Hope this helped, Adam.
Approximately 130 nmi (240km) off the east coast of Florida.
There are 2 solid rocket boosters (white things) and one fuel tank (red thing) the solid rocket boosters do all the work and use up the fuel in the fuel tank and then both the solid rocket boosters and the fuel tank fall off and are collect on earth and reused (there is a secondary fuel tank built in to the actual to take were it need to go once its in space)
They have beepers on them that can be tracked. The recovery team also tracks them on radar and visually as they fall into the sea.
About three minutes into a Space Shuttle launch, the Solid Rocket Boosters are jettisoned and fall back to the Earth. Parachutes are used to slow the solid rocket boosters down so that they hit the water at a safe speed that won't cause any damage. Recovery ships from the Kennedy Space Center then sail to their location, pick up the boosters, and take them back to be refurbished and used again. About nine minutes into the flight, the external fuel tank is jettisoned. Because of the high altitude, there is no way to bring the external tank back to Earth intact. Instead, the external tank is allowed to re-enter the atmosphere, where it is burned up and destroyed over the Indian Ocean.
The two solid rocket boosters land in the Atlantic, just off the coast of Florida. The external tank, for the most part, burns up in the atmosphere.
Certainly not! The space shuttle was the first reuseable space craft. After its solid rocket boosters and belly tank fall away, they are collected from the sea.
The two white Solid Rocket boosters fall back into the sea and are re-used. The main engines are on the shuttle itself which of course is used many times.
The two white solid rocket boosters fall off after 2 minutes and parachute back to the Atlantic ocean. The external tank burns up in the atmosphere.
The solid rocket boosters are jettisoned as their fuel runs out. Their fall is slowed by parachutes and they are later recovered and returned to the Kennedy Space Center for refurbishing and reuse on later missions.
The twin rocket boosters (two white ones) fall into the Atlantic ocean just East of Cape Canaveral, Florida after about 8 minutes of flight. The external tank (big orange one) falls off in space a while after. The twin rocket boosters are retrieved by two carrier type ships near Kennedy Space Center. The two boosters are the reused, but the external is not. Little known fact, all the external tank does is hold the liquid oxygen and other prepellents, it is the twin boosters and orbiters which do all the work! Hope this helped, Adam.
Virtually every part of a rocket burns up upon re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. The only part that returned from the Moon missions were the very tip of the 365 foot rocket. This capsule contained the 3 astronauts and three parachutes. The space shuttle does a little better. The two white solid rocket boosters fall to Earth and parachutes into the sea. They are collected and reused
The solid rocket boosters detach from the shuttle at about 45 km, but the boosters keep rising to about 67 km. They then fall back toward earth and once they enter the atmosphere, the rockets. parachutes are deployed. Each rocket is decelerated by three main parachutes. The boosters then slowly and safely fall into the ocean, and are retrieved by two NASA recovery ships. Experts refurbish the boosters, so they can be reused for the next launch. How do the retrieval ships know where to find the items? A total of 12 elements, two SRB casings, six main parachutes, two frustums, and two drogue parachutes, are equipped with location "beacons" to track all the parts that need retrieved.