Command module.
Yes earth is a part of water cycle. Water returns back to earth's surface.
Only part of the command module returns to the earth.
The dispenser and the payload
While no FF has ever been on "earth" the ending of Final Fantasy Lightning returns could be construed to take place on earth.
Rainfall returns water back to earth. So it plays a key part in water cycle.
No, "payload specialist" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title that requires capitalization.
Halley's Comet returns to the part of its orbit visible from Earth.
Water returns to Earth's surface as rain, sleet,or snow which is in form of precipitation.
Pay load is the total weight of the instruments, passengers, crew, and life-support systems that a space shuttle carries or can carry. The usual payload capacity for the space shuttle is 22,700 kilograms, but it can be raised depending on the choice of launch arrangement. Pay loads get off the earth by being launched in to orbit with either two different booster stages. The space shuttle gets the payload of the earth by using fuel tanks. The payload is attached to the space shuttle and is carried onto it when going into space.
When the space shuttle goes through the atmosphere, the space shuttle can then by itself land safely because no fuel will be needed. You can use the atmosphere of the earth to slow the space shuttle down allowing it land safely with the payload. The payload will still be on the space shuttle because it won't be removed, only the equipment will be removed from the space shuttle. The shuttle has to do no work whatsoever when bringing it back to earth because it won't be needing fuel when landing on earth.
The single-stage rocket can get the payload off earth, but not into space, because there is not enough fuel, and the weight eventually becomes too great. So at some point, the rocket will fall back down to earth. For this reason, most single-stage rockets are missiles.
it returns by evaporation and runoff (rivers and streams)