This article is about the term's application in the field of aeronautics. For other uses, see Soft landing (disambiguation)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Soft landing" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
A soft landing is any type of aircraft, rocket or spacecraft landing that does not result in significant damage to or destruction of the vehicle or its payload, as opposed to a hard landing. The average vertical speed in a soft landing should be about 2 meters (6.6 ft) per second or less.
A soft landing can be achieved by
- Parachute—often this is into water.
- Vertical rocket power using retrorockets, often referred to as VTVL (vertical landing referred to as VTOL, is usually for aircraft landing in a level attitude, rather than rockets) — first achieved on a suborbital trajectory by Bell Rocket Belt and on an orbital trajectory by the Surveyor 1.
- Horizontal landing, most aircraft and some spacecraft, such as the Space Shuttle, land this way accompanied with a parachute.
- Being caught in midair, as done with Corona spy satellites and followed by some other form of landing.
- Reducing landing speed by impact with the body's surface, known as lithobraking.
See also
References
- Sreedhar, Vidya (2023-08-23). "Chandrayaan-3 Effect! These 7 space-related stocks scale 52-week highs". The Economic Times. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
Types of takeoff and landing | |
---|---|
Takeoff | |
Assisted take-off | |
Takeoff and landing | |
Landing |
This rocketry article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |