NASA’s flagship Artemis I mission is about to fly past the moon

After blasting off on the enormous Space Launch System rocket, NASA’s Orion capsule is due to approach the moon at 1244 GMT today

Space



21 November 2022


NASA’s Artemis I spacecraft is making a close approach to the moon, as it is due to fly within 130 kilometres (80 miles) above the farside of the lunar surface at 1244 GMT today, before entering orbit next week.

The Orion capsule blasted off on top of the enormous Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the most powerful ever launched, on 16 November. After years of delays and several missed launch opportunities this year thwarted by hydrogen leaks, technical issues and, most recently, a hurricane that SLS weathered on the launchpad at Cape Canaveral in Florida, the liftoff went astonishingly smoothly.

“It was surprising to me that it went without a hitch,” says space analyst Laura Forczyk. “I mean, there were small hitches, but it didn’t explode!” The biggest of those small hitches was a set of loose bolts that a team was sent out to the launchpad shortly before launch to tighten – it is extraordinarily rare to see anyone working on rocket hardware so close to liftoff.

Orion is expected to enter orbit around the moon on 25 November. Then, after six days in orbit, it’s got to come back – a part of the mission that is just as crucial as the launch itself. It is expected to return to Earth on 11 December.

“Bringing Orion back is going to be as big a challenge as getting off the Earth,” NASA associate administrator Thomas Zurbuchen told New Scientist. “The risks just add up… The mission is only over once Orion is down safely here.” Only then can we consider it safe enough to put humans aboard, which is the goal of the Artemis II mission, currently planned for 2024.

For that mission, NASA will have to be even more careful. “Humans are needy creatures,” says Emily Judd at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Virginia. “We have to have the oxygen to breathe, we need food, all of the life support systems that are required – part of Artemis I is testing out those systems, making sure that everything is ready for the crew when they go up on Artemis II.”

While Artemis I’s main purpose is to test the SLS and Orion spacecraft ahead of Artemis II, which will see a crewed Orion perform a lunar flyby, there are some other scientific goals as well. SLS carried ten cubesats, which are small satellites weighing only about 11 kilograms each, into space and released them hours after the launch.

Four of the cubesats are designed to study the moon, including a Japanese experiment called Omotenashi, which is intended to perform a soft landing on the moon’s surface. This would make Japan only the fourth nation to do so, and with the smallest lunar lander ever. However, Omotenashi appears to be tumbling in space, which might prevent it from landing.

Three of the cubesats are intended to study radiation in space, one called NEA Scout will fly via solar sail to a nearby asteroid, and the remaining two are technology demonstrations for improved deep-space propulsion methods. According to a NASA press conference on 18 November, five of the ten cubesats are currently functioning as expected, while the other five are experiencing either technology issues or are unable to communicate with their operators on Earth.

All of this is building to the Artemis III mission, which is intended to bring astronauts to the moon’s surface for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972 – and inform future scientific study. “We have barely touched the surface of what we can learn – yes, about the moon, but also about Earth and about how we can survive on Mars,” sais Forczyk. “The moon is the stepping stone to the solar system.”

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source: newscientist.com