15 C
London
Monday, April 29, 2024
HomeScienceArtemis: Nasa is authorized to launch its moon mission.

Artemis: Nasa is authorized to launch its moon mission.

Next Monday, the American space agency will launch its massive new Moon rocket.

Monday night, Nasa officials completed a flight readiness check and determined there were no significant technical obstacles in their way.

The Space Launch System rocket will propel the Orion spacecraft on a circumlunar journey around the Moon.

If all goes according to plan, astronauts will embark on subsequent missions, which will be unmanned this time.

The SLS will launch from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC).

Monday, at 08:33 local time, the vehicle will have a two-hour opportunity to depart the planet (12:33 GMT; 13:33 BST).

Artemis: nasa is authorized to launch its moon mission.
Artemis: nasa is authorized to launch its moon mission.

Jim Free, NASA’s assistant administrator for exploration systems development, stated, “We had no actions resulting from the evaluation, and there were no conflicting viewpoints.”

The launch will be a pivotal occasion for Nasa, which will commemorate the 50th anniversary of Apollo 17 – the very last human landing on the Moon – in December.

The agency has sworn to return with its new “Artemis project” utilizing modern technology (Artemis was the twin sister of the Greek god Apollo and the goddess of the moon).

NASA views a return to the Moon as preparation for sending astronauts to Mars in the 2030s or shortly thereafter.

“Right now, more than half of the world’s population has never witnessed somebody walk on another planet, so in many ways, this will be their first moonwalk,” said Keith Cowing, editor of the Nasa Watch website, which monitors NASA news.

“We do things differently, everything is instantaneous, and everything will be in high definition… It’s going to be thrilling and noisy, but eventually, we’ll be sending humans to walk on another planet, and ideally this time it’ll be a worldwide effort rather than two countries competing “he informed.

SLS and Orion have been in development for more than a decade and have both cost more than $20 billion to date.

Orion has flown before, once, during a 2014 test flight near Earth. However, this spacecraft utilized an existing commercial rocket. This forthcoming mission is the first comprehensive assessment of the Artemis exploration gear from end to end.

Last week, SLS and Orion were transported to the launch pad. In preparation for the countdown, engineering and technical personnel have spent the intervening days connecting fuel, electrical, and communication cables.

This should commence with a “call to stations” for the Artemis I launch team at 09:53 EDT on Saturday, and the operation to load the SLS with 2.7 million liters of propellants (liquid hydrogen and oxygen) is scheduled to begin at midnight on Monday.

Launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson said, “We’ve performed 30 simulations, so our crew is certified and ready to go.”

NASA anticipates hundreds of thousands of onlookers to throng the space coast’s beaches.

This will be the most powerful rocket to ever launch from Kennedy, with 39.1 meganewtons (8.8 million pounds) of force. This is around 15% more than the Saturn V rockets used by Apollo and nearly 20% more than the previous space shuttle system.

In other words, the SLS’s engines could power the equivalent of over sixty Concorde supersonic jets during launch.

As the launch date approaches, Janet Petro, the director at KSC, remarked, “I can tell you that there is a buzz and a sense of anticipation at the Kennedy Space Center; I would say throughout the agency and the entire Space Coast.”

Orion will embark on a 42-day trip to the Moon and beyond.

It is projected to return to Earth on October 10 and splash down in the Pacific Ocean near San Diego, California.

Artemis II, the first crewed SLS-Orion mission, is scheduled for 2024. Artemis III, the first lunar surface landing since 1972, will not occur until late 2025.

Nasa has not yet named any astronauts for these trips, but it has publicized in recent days the potential landing sites on the lunar surface for future explorers.

It has identified thirteen potential destinations. They are all within six degrees of the lunar South Pole’s latitude (Apollo was largely confined to equatorial or near-equatorial landing sites).

The objective is to approach permanently shaded regions where water-ices have presumably accumulated over billions of years.

These ices could be utilized to produce potable water or rocket propellant.

Bob Cabana, a former shuttle astronaut and the associate administrator of NASA, stated, shortly after the completion of Monday’s assessment, “I am a product of the Apollo age, and look what it has done for us! I cannot wait to see what the Artemis generation produces because I believe it will inspire much more than Apollo. It will be spectacular.”

RELATED ARTICLES

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Popular

Yousaf to reject Alba Party pact despite its significance

Ash Regan, the only MSP for the Alba Party, is expected to demand that several of her opponents resign; this demand will be categorically denied. Humza Yousaf will not support an electoral alliance with Alex Salmond's party that would have required the SNP to cede control of certain Scottish seats. According to The Sunday Times, the Alba Party intended to elevate the accord to the "top line" of its discussions with Mr. Yousaf.

How an ancient water tunnel cools modern streets

Seville, located in southern Spain, experienced summertime temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) last year. The intensity of the heatwave merited a moniker: Heatwave Yago, the second event bearing the city's name in the past two years.  Similar to numerous other cities in Europe and globally, Seville is currently grappling with temperatures that exceed its structural capacity. In London, England, railway tracks and airport tarmac were dissolved by extreme heat in the summer of 2022. Germans began contemplating midday siestas in July 2023 as a means to flee the oppressive heat.

Campus protests: Hundreds arrested at US universities amid Gaza rallies

Hundreds are detained at universities across the United States in connection with ongoing Gaza protests.  On Saturday, hundreds more individuals were detained on college campuses throughout the United States in response to student demonstrations against the Gaza conflict.  Jill Stein, a presidential candidate for the Green Party, was among those detained by police.

Sunak doesn’t rule out July election, emphasizing clear choice

Rishi Sunak has refrained from formally denying the possibility of conducting a nationwide election in July, despite the continued prevalence of conjecture regarding the occasion. Consistently, the prime minister has expressed his "working assumption" that the election will occur during the latter part of this year; however, the law stipulates that he cannot call it off until January 2025. However, numerous commentators have anticipated a referendum in the autumn.

Recent Comments