00:00On this day in space.
00:03On September 8, 2004, NASA's Genesis spacecraft crash-landed in Utah after its parachutes failed to deploy.
00:10Genesis was NASA's first sample-return mission since the Apollo program,
00:14and the first to bring back samples from anywhere farther than the Moon.
00:17The spacecraft picked up solar wind particles while orbiting the L1 Lagrange point,
00:21which is about one million miles away from Earth.
00:24L1 is a sweet spot between the Earth and the Sun, where the gravitational pull from both objects balances out.
00:29Genesis collected samples of the solar wind using arrays made of ultra-thin semiconductors called wafers.
00:35Atoms and ions floating around in space stuck to these wafers, and Genesis was supposed to bring them back safely.
00:41But that didn't happen, because its parachute didn't work.
00:45Genesis tumbled from the sky and slammed into the Utah desert.
00:49Scientists literally had to pick up the pieces.
00:52The wafers containing all their samples had shattered into thousands of little shards.
00:56Luckily, scientists were still able to salvage some of the samples.
01:00And that's what happened on this day in space.
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