Artemis II launch: people gather for a glimpse of historic NASA lunar expedition
Artemis II launch: people gather for a glimpse of historic NASA lunar expedition
A fully crewed rocket will launch to the moon from Florida, marking the first time humans have left lower Earth orbit since 1972.
A little more than an hour before sunset on Florida’s space coast, up to 400,000 people will gather on beaches and causeways on Wednesday to view a flaming spectacle not seen in nearly 54 years: a fully crewed NASA rocket returning to the moon.
Artemis II’s launch, slated for 6.24pm ET assuming weather and any late technical gremlins offer their assent, will be the first time people have departed lower Earth orbit since the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972.
“The nation, and the world, has been waiting a long time to do this again,” Reid Wiseman, a veteran NASA astronaut and Artemis II commander, told reporters at the Kennedy Space Center on Sunday, as the crew of three Americans and one Canadian arrived to enter quarantine before launch.
Their 10-day test flight, which will not land on the moon, is a mission full of accomplishments. Two members of the crew, NASA’s Christina Koch and Victor Glover, will be the first women and people of color to fly into cislunar space, which is the space between Earth and the moon.
The fourth crew member, Jeremy Hansen from the Canadian Space Agency, will be the first non-American to do so.
Artemis II’s Orion space capsule may transport them farther from Earth than any human before them. A Wednesday launch would most likely take them more than 4,600 miles (7,400 kilometers) beyond the far side of the moon on flying day six, and just shy of 253,000 miles from home, beating the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission’s record of 248,655 miles set in April 1970.
Prior to Donald Trump’s entry to office, NASA recognized the diversity of Artemis crews on its website, but removed the recognition last year in accordance with the president’s executive order, which urged government agencies to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices and language.
Glover, who is African American, and Koch were also careful to downplay the relevance of their race during pre-flight interviews.
“It’s not about celebrating any one individual,” Koch said at the crew’s final media briefing on Monday.
“If there’s anything to celebrate, it’s that we live in a time when anyone with a desire can work just as hard to make it a reality. If we don’t travel for all and by all, we aren’t genuinely responding humanity’s call to adventure.”
Aside from politics, Nasa hopes that Artemis II’s lunar flyby will serve as a foundation for ambitious plans revealed last month by the space agency’s newly confirmed chief, Jared Isaacman, for a $20 billion (£15 billion) moon base by the end of this decade.
This mission’s primary goal is to photograph portions of the moon’s south pole where the next human landing and ultimate lunar base are planned from a height of 4,000 to 6,000 miles.
The extended journey also allows the astronauts to test critical hardware and life-support systems that will be required for the program’s future flights, including Artemis IV, a historic crewed mission scheduled for 2028 that will ultimately return human footprints to the lunar surface.
The Artemis II astronauts’ health will be monitored at all times, including a study of the effects of increased radiation and microgravity. They must live together within the capsule’s five-meter diameter, with an interior volume the size of a small camper van, until they splash down in the Pacific Ocean at the end of their 685,000-mile journey.
“Like clicking a pen cap can annoy somebody over 10 days in a small capsule,” said Wiseman, who has spent practically every day with his crew since their selection in April 2023.
“We have a great conversation together, and we talk about those kinds of things, but there will definitely be times when we’re like, ‘Man, all right, I need a little space, and I can’t get any right now.'” But we’re a good crew.”
NASA The Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion capsule stack stand 322 feet (98 meters) tall on the launchpad and will separate into stages at various times throughout its ascent.Nasa is certain it has resolved the heat-shield issue that resulted in a nerve-racking re-entry for Artemis I, as well as the helium leak that pushed Artemis II back to its assembly building in February, forcing NASA’s to postpone the next launch attempt until April.
Nasa’s final weather briefing on Tuesday predicted an 80% likelihood of acceptable circumstances, in the event of a scrubbed launch, remain.” Nasa has a five-night window to attempt again.
This week, Cape Canaveral and Cocoa Beach, which are already crowded with spring breakers, are experiencing increased excitement for the launch, and hotel rooms are in limited supply.
It is a feeling shared by engineers and mission managers at the Kennedy Space Center, where they have spent years planning the next steps in the Artemis program. It was planned to provide a human moon landing at the start of the decade, but it is already years behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget.
What we learn from that trip will help America return to the moon’s surface. When we get to the moon, we’re going to remain.”NASA