Artemis 1 Mission: next launch attempt is planned for October or November 2022
Posted: Wed Oct 05, 2022 4:43 pm
Is Artemis 1 on schedule?
Artemis 1: two launch attempts were cancelled on 29 August and 3 September 2022. The next launch attempt is planned for no sooner than mid October 2022 (TBC) Artemis 2: no earlier than 2024 (TBC) Artemis 3: 2025.
Read more here:
https://www.sciencealert.com/nasa-is-ab ... ed-to-know
NASA Is About to Launch Its Most Powerful Rocket Ever. Here's What You Need to Know ( Posted: 29 August 2022 )
NASA's Artemis 1 mission is poised to take a key step toward returning humans to the Moon after a half-century hiatus.
The mission, scheduled to launch on Monday 29 August 2022 [8:33 am Eastern Time], is a shakedown cruise – sans crew – for NASA's Space Launch System and Orion Crew Capsule.
The spacecraft is scheduled to travel to the Moon, deploy some small satellites and then settle into orbit. NASA aims to practice operating the spacecraft, test the conditions crews will experience on and around the Moon, and assure everyone that the spacecraft and any occupants can safely return to Earth.
The Conversation asked Jack Burns, a professor and space scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder and former member of the Presidential Transition Team for NASA, to describe the mission, explain what the Artemis program promises to do for space exploration, and reflect on how the space program has changed in the half-century since humans last set foot on the lunar surface.
Artemis 1: two launch attempts were cancelled on 29 August and 3 September 2022. The next launch attempt is planned for no sooner than mid October 2022 (TBC) Artemis 2: no earlier than 2024 (TBC) Artemis 3: 2025.
Read more here:
https://www.sciencealert.com/nasa-is-ab ... ed-to-know
NASA Is About to Launch Its Most Powerful Rocket Ever. Here's What You Need to Know ( Posted: 29 August 2022 )
NASA's Artemis 1 mission is poised to take a key step toward returning humans to the Moon after a half-century hiatus.
The mission, scheduled to launch on Monday 29 August 2022 [8:33 am Eastern Time], is a shakedown cruise – sans crew – for NASA's Space Launch System and Orion Crew Capsule.
The spacecraft is scheduled to travel to the Moon, deploy some small satellites and then settle into orbit. NASA aims to practice operating the spacecraft, test the conditions crews will experience on and around the Moon, and assure everyone that the spacecraft and any occupants can safely return to Earth.
The Conversation asked Jack Burns, a professor and space scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder and former member of the Presidential Transition Team for NASA, to describe the mission, explain what the Artemis program promises to do for space exploration, and reflect on how the space program has changed in the half-century since humans last set foot on the lunar surface.