I love that the assigned roles on this flight are "commander", "pilot", "mission specialist", and "Canadian".Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen
Instead of "roger that" they reply with "eh"I love that the assigned roles on this flight are "commander", "pilot", "mission specialist", and "Canadian".
Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun?Cue the classic Pink Floyd album…
When Canada was named they put all the letters in the english alphabet in a hat and then drew out one at a time - C eh, N eh, D eh...Instead of "roger that" they reply with "eh"
Cue the classic Pink Floyd album…
I guess that is one way to beat the long TSA lines in Houston.“Things are certainly starting to feel real here at the Cape,” said Koch. The crew members arrived in Florida on Friday, flying a set of T-38 supersonic trainer jets from their home base in Houston.
Um.... I hope you meant Wednesday afternoon; otherwise they'd be strapped in and making good use of their diapers for more than 24 hours before launch.Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen will strap into their seats inside the Orion crew capsule on Tuesday afternoon.
I to remember Apollo 8, going outside hoping to see the sunlight glint off an orbiting command module in my little reflector telescope. What we knew then was that our space program was being run by the best folks. The people in charge today are all about conquest, not exploration. I'm sure the flight team is, but the folks at the top are all about making a buck from this. That is what is missing. The sense of wonder, stepping into the unknown, and analyzing the facts instead of making up a bunch of malarky.I remember the Apollo 8 Christmas as a kid, so much excitement....not knowing which was better....astronauts or the prospect of presents. And then of course there was THAT photo. Even at my rural British primary school everyone knew about Apollo.
Maybe I'm just old and jaded but I'm not feeling the same sense of excitement this time. I fully agree with Isaacman that NASA has the ability and duty to inspire. I really really hope this mission will start that.
Good luck everyone. I know it's not much help, but a grumpy old Brit is rooting for you.
Blame Canada! GaspI love that the assigned roles on this flight are "commander", "pilot", "mission specialist", and "Canadian".
♫ Here am I floating 'round my tin canGround control to Major Tom...
I know I still have their first LP (vinyl) in a box in the basement!Eh, fuck Dark Side and whining about Syd. Not like they helped much anyway.
HAWKWIND is the right soundtrack for this sort of thing. Silver Machine.
"Return to the moon"...as in they're only going to orbit it and come home. Which is kind of like telling my boss I 'went to work today', by driving passed the parking lot before grabbing a McFlurry and heading back home.
The Orion capsule is much scarier than the SLS rocket. This flight is the first time that many brand new or substantially redesigned hardware systems have been in space, much less sent out to the Moon. Several systems also severely malfunctioned on the last test flight. Casey Handmer did an excellent write up on the subject.Best of luck to the mission. I, personally, would be reluctant to fly on any mission powered by an SLS rocket. Their history and safety culture are...let's just say...suspect.
Nor should you be as excited. Repeating a feat 53 years after the fact shouldn't rise to the same level of anticipation. Sure, it's cool and I'm glad to see NASA do something new(ish), but I'm not at a fever pitch - and I wasn't alive during any of the previous Apollo flights to the moon.I remember the Apollo 8 Christmas as a kid, so much excitement....not knowing which was better....astronauts or the prospect of presents. And then of course there was THAT photo. Even at my rural British primary school everyone knew about Apollo.
Maybe I'm just old and jaded but I'm not feeling the same sense of excitement this time. I fully agree with Isaacman that NASA has the ability and duty to inspire. I really really hope this mission will start that.
Good luck everyone. I know it's not much help, but a grumpy old Brit is rooting for you.
With a Canadian on board and millions of Americans wanting to say Farewell to Kings, why not set course for Cygnus X-1?Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun?
Can anyone confirm this statement? The astronauts aboard Apollo 13 hold the current distance record. Afaik, Artemis II will simply do a lunar flyby and will not follow a Distance Retrograde Orbit in this mission. Therefore, they will not exceed Apollo 13’s range. Future Artemis missions that follow a DRO will, but not this one.Depending on the launch date (the exact trajectory varies day to day), the crew will fly farther than any humans in history
Actually not even orbit"Return to the moon"...as in they're only going to orbit it and come home. Which is kind of like telling my boss I 'went to work today', by driving passed the parking lot before grabbing a McFlurry and heading back home.
But SLS has a 100% success rate. /sLaunching on the SLS would make me nervous. It does make me nervous for this crew. The entire development has been a cavalcade of issues.
I'm not sure of the details of Apollo 13's flight, but I do know it was an unpowered, direct return trajectory which is exactly what Artemis II will be doing. So then all that matters is what's the excess velocity at the point of gravitational crossover and how close you're aiming at the moon. For orbital landing purposes, you want that value to be darned close to zero. Any excess velocity is energy you have to shed to insert into orbit. For Apollo 13, there was a desire to get the astronauts home as quickly as possible so there was no reason to "swing wide" around the moon. Artemis has no such constraint.Can anyone confirm this statement? The astronauts aboard Apollo 13 hold the current distance record. Afaik, Artemis II will simply do a lunar flyby and will not follow a Distance Retrograde Orbit in this mission. Therefore, they will not exceed Apollo 13’s range. Future Artemis missions that follow a DRO will, but not this one.
I remember the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs as they happened. The black and white TV coverage. Walter Cronkite's sonorous tones describing what we were watching. The feeling of excitement at the idea of space flight.I remember the Apollo 8 Christmas as a kid, so much excitement....not knowing which was better....astronauts or the prospect of presents. And then of course there was THAT photo. Even at my rural British primary school everyone knew about Apollo.
Maybe I'm just old and jaded but I'm not feeling the same sense of excitement this time. I fully agree with Isaacman that NASA has the ability and duty to inspire. I really really hope this mission will start that.
Good luck everyone. I know it's not much help, but a grumpy old Brit is rooting for you.
* Millenium FalconPrincess Leia said:You came in that* thing? You're braver than I thought!
It depends on the launch date. If they launch on the 1st, 2nd or 3rd, they will break the distance record. If they launch on the 4th, 5th or 6th, it will be close enough that it's within the margin of error of NASA's trajectory projections (this was one of the questions in the L-2 presser yesterday).Can anyone confirm this statement? The astronauts aboard Apollo 13 hold the current distance record. Afaik, Artemis II will simply do a lunar flyby and will not follow a Distance Retrograde Orbit in this mission. Therefore, they will not exceed Apollo 13’s range. Future Artemis missions that follow a DRO will, but not this one.
The good news for the crew is that chances aborting the mission before lunar injection due to SLS and/or Orion faults, or scrubbing the whole mission before launch are high.The Orion capsule is much scarier than the SLS rocket. This flight is the first time that many brand new or substantially redesigned hardware systems have been in space, much less sent out to the Moon. Several systems also severely malfunctioned on the last test flight. Casey Handmer did an excellent write up on the subject.
Ignoring the heat shield, take for example: the life support systems have never been launched with Orion. The battery design, has been significantly redesigned, on every Orion flight. The power distribution system faulted more than 24 times, blaming "space radiation" (isn't this thing supposed to operate in deep space?).
I can't believe they're putting people on this thing, much less 4 people when we at a minimum should send 2 to reduce the possible (possible, but I pray not likely) loss of human lives.
"Return to the moon"...as in they're only going to orbit it and come home. Which is kind of like telling my boss I 'went to work today', by driving passed the parking lot before grabbing a McFlurry and heading back home.
Yeah, ”briefly return to the vicinity of the moon” doesn’t have the same ring to it, I guess…Actually not even orbit