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Dramatic underwater photographs have captured the Orion spacecraft’s heat shield shortly after its safe splashdown, drawing widespread attention for its ghostly, shipwreck-like appearance. U.S. Navy divers took the images in the Pacific Ocean, leading many to call the charred heat shield a “sunken treasure.”
The photos, released in late April 2026, show the heat shield illuminated in the deep blue water, its surface darkened and textured from the extreme heat of reentry.
This striking visual has become one of the most memorable images from the successful Artemis II mission.
A Critical Component Tested Under Extreme Conditions
During the April 10, 2026, splashdown, the heat shield played its most important role.
As the Orion capsule returned from its lunar flyby, it slammed into Earth’s atmosphere at nearly 25,000 miles per hour.
Temperatures on the shield’s surface reached approximately 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
The heat shield, made primarily of Avcoat, an ablative material, is designed to burn away in a controlled manner.
This process carries extreme heat away from the crew module, protecting the astronauts inside.
Strong Performance After Previous Concerns
Following the uncrewed Artemis I flight in 2022, NASA noted more char loss than expected on the heat shield.
Engineers made adjustments for Artemis II, including a modified reentry trajectory to reduce stress on the shield.
Initial post-mission assessments are positive.
NASA reported that the char loss was significantly reduced both in quantity and size compared to the previous test.
Early inspections found the heat shield “performed as expected, with no unusual conditions identified.”
Comparison Of Heat Shield Performance
| Feature | Artemis I (2022) | Artemis II (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Mission Type | Uncrewed | Crewed |
| Char Loss | Higher | Significantly reduced |
| Reentry Conditions | Standard | Adjusted trajectory |
| NASA Assessment | Some concerns | Performed as expected |
What Happens Next
The Orion capsule has been returned to Kennedy Space Center for detailed analysis.
The heat shield will undergo further examination, including X-ray scans and material sampling at Marshall Space Flight Center.
This data will help refine designs for upcoming missions, particularly Artemis III, which aims to return humans to the lunar surface.
Interesting Fact
The Avcoat material used in Orion’s heat shield belongs to the same family of ablative technology developed for the Apollo missions more than five decades ago. While significantly improved, the fundamental principle remains the same: the shield protects the crew by sacrificing itself during the fiery plunge through the atmosphere.
The successful performance of the Artemis II heat shield represents an important milestone for NASA’s Artemis program.
It provides greater confidence as the agency prepares for increasingly complex lunar missions in the coming years.





