English edit

 
Drag parachute opens as Space Shuttle Atlantis touches down.

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Noun edit

drag parachute (plural drag parachutes)

  1. (aeronautics, motor racing) A parachute deployed behind an aircraft, space shuttle, or motor vehicle as a braking device.
    • 1962 July 27, “Jet-Powered Dragster”, in Spokane Daily Chronicle, retrieved 13 November 2015, page 12:
      The jet dragster has been clocked at 232.24 miles per hour. . . . The car is stopped by a drag parachute.
    • 1992 May 17, “Shuttle Uses Parachute to Chalk Up Another First”, in New York Times, retrieved 13 November 2015:
      As planned, within seconds of touching down, the space craft released a 40-foot-wide drag parachute to help slow it down.
    • 2009 September 8, “Retired RAF pilot saves bomber from air show disaster”, in Telegraph, UK, retrieved 13 November 2015:
      The aircraft is designed to use a drag parachute as a brake, but Mr Prothero didn't have time to deploy it.

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