NASA’s MOON BOUND: ARTEMIS II POISED FOR HISTORIC LAUNCH!

GREATRIBUNETVNEWS–NASA’s Artemis II mission is nearing takeoff, marking humanity’s return to the moon after 50 years.
Here are the key updates:
– Launch Timeline : NASA officials outlined the pre-launch, launch, and post-launch plans, prioritizing astronaut safety.
– Safety First : “I will tell you, we’re going to fly when we’re ready,” said John Honeycutt, Artemis II mission management team chair, emphasizing the importance of safety.
– Test Flight : “Artemis II is a test flight. It truly is exploration,” said Jacob Bleacher, chief exploration scientist at NASA’s Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate.
– Firsts Ahead: The mission will involve several firsts, with science serving as a “toolbox for survival” during exploration.
– Crewed Lunar Mission : Artemis II will be humankind’s first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years, marking a significant milestone in space exploration
The update came a day before one of the first major steps to getting Artemis II off the ground: on Saturday, after years of work, delays and anticipation, engineers at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., will begin rolling out the fully stacked Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft. The journey from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39B will be a slow, stately crawl over roughly four miles that will take up to 12 days, culminating in easing the mission’s hulking hardware onto the launch pad.
Once there, focus will turn to a series of important prelaunch tests. A critical milestone is a “wet dress rehearsal,” during which flight teams will load more than 700,000 gallons of cryogenic propellant and practice the countdown sequence—pushing the spacecraft to its limits without astronauts onboard. During similar preparations for Artemis II’s uncrewed predecessor, Artemis I, persistent problems with hydrogen leaks ultimately delayed that mission’s launch for months. This time, NASA is hoping the process will be much smoother. The earliest date in the mission’s launch window is February 6.
If all goes according to plan, Artemis II will lift off on its historic journey carrying four astronauts—NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen—on a 10-day flight around the moon and back: the Orion spacecraft will follow a free-return trajectory that uses the moon’s gravity to loop the crew around and back toward Earth. Reaching about 4,700 miles beyond the lunar farside, the crew will go the farthest from Earth any humans have ever voyaged, ensuring not only rigorous system checks but also breathtaking views of our home planet—and, of course, the moon.
During the mission, the crew will wear sensors to monitor their health and physiological responses to the deep-space environment beyond the moon. Among the myriad experiments packed into Artemis II’s science payloads will be AVATAR (A Virtual Astronaut Tissue Analog Response), a system designed to mimic individual astronaut organs. Artemis II will be the first time AVATAR has been tested so far from Earth.
All that will help ensure future astronauts can “survive and thrive” in deep space, Bleacher said. “Artemis II’s science is the science of us.”
The mission’s most breathtaking highlight, however, will probably be the view. The crew will dedicate about a day to observing the moon, especially its farside, which can’t be seen from Earth. As the Orion capsule swoops around our natural satellite, Bleacher said, the moon will appear to the astronauts as about the same size as a basketball held at arm’s length. Depending on the spacecraft’s timing and trajectory, he added, “it’s possible they’ll see parts of the moon that have never been viewed by human eyes.”
The mission is the strongest stress test yet of NASA’s Artemis program to return humans to the moon. Artemis II will demonstrate Orion’s life support, navigation, and operational systems in a deep-space environment—the first such test since NASA’s Apollo program ended more than a half-century ago.
“We want to put Orion through its paces,” said Artemis II’s lead flight director, Jeff Radigan. “This is a test flight, and there’s things that are going to be unexpected, you know. I think we’ve prepared for those as much as we can.”
Of particular concern is the Orion capsule’s heat shield; during the uncrewed Artemis I test, the heat shield shed larger and more numerous chunks of ablative material than expected, raising safety concerns for future missions. NASA officials changed the plan for Artemis II’s atmospheric reentry on its way back to Earth so that its Orion capsule heat shield will experience a shorter but more intense period of extreme heating. This tweak, officials say, should help ensure crew safety.
After the nail-biting reentry, Artemis II’s crew will splash down off the coast of San Diego, Calif. But these astronauts’ mission won’t end there—among the plethora of postflight tests that await them in the days after they return will be an “obstacle course” and simulated space walks in pressurized space suits to test the suits’ functionality after going through a gravity transition. These tests will help gauge a crew’s readiness for lunar surface operations.
That work, said NASA’s landing and recovery director for Artemis II Liliana Villarreal, “prepares us for landing on the moon [with Artemis III] and eventually, down the road, going to destinations such as Mars.”
Credit: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/nasas-historic-artemis-ii-moon-mission-is-almost-ready-to-launch/
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