Roket Artemis I mega Moon ada di landasan peluncuran di[{” attribute=””>NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This powerful Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is getting ready to launch the Orion spacecraft and its European Service Module. The first opportunity for launch is November 16 at 1:04 a.m. EST/local time (07:04 CET, 06:04 GMT).
Artemis I is the first mission in a large program to send astronauts around and on the Moon sustainably. This uncrewed first launch will see the Orion spacecraft travel to the Moon, enter an elongated orbit around our satellite, and then return to Earth. The Orion spacecraft is powered by the European-built module that supplies electricity, propulsion, fuel, water, and air in addition to keeping the spacecraft operating at the right temperature.
Artemis to the Moon
The European Service Modules are made from components supplied by over 20 companies in ten European Space Agency (ESA) Member States and the United States. As the first European Service Module sits atop the SLS rocket on the launchpad, the second is only 8 km (5 miles) away, as it is currently being integrated with the Orion crew capsule for the first crewed mission – Artemis II. The third and fourth European Service Modules – that will power astronauts to a Moon landing – are in production in Bremen, Germany.
The Artemis program is an international endeavor to build a permanent outpost around and on the Moon. Modules for the lunar Gateway are being built in the United States and Europe, with the first European module – International Habitat – in production in Turin, Italy, and set for launch on the fourth Artemis mission alongside the Orion spacecraft.
The first Artemis launch this week is without humans, but three mannequins have been placed in the spacecraft’s seats to conduct scientific research. Fitted with more than 5600 sensors, two mannequins will measure the amount of radiation astronauts could be exposed to in future missions with unprecedented precision. ESA is also including active radiation dosimeters in the Crew Module to get more data on how radiation levels change on a mission to the Moon – building on the leadership developed over decades of radiation research on the International Space Station.
Dates
With a November 16 launch, the three-week Artemis I mission would end on December 11 with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. The European Service Module detaches from the Orion Crew Module before splashdown and burns up harmlessly in the atmosphere, its job complete after taking Orion to the Moon and back safely.
Backup Artemis I launch dates include November 19. Watch the launch live on ESA Web TV.
Pesawat ruang angkasa Orion yang dilengkapi dengan Modul Layanan Eropa akan terbang lebih jauh dari Bumi daripada pesawat ruang angkasa yang diklasifikasikan manusia sebelumnya. Video ini memberikan gambaran tentang misi pertama – tanpa astronot – Artemis, dengan fokus pada Modul Layanan Eropa Badan Antariksa Eropa yang mengoperasikan pesawat ruang angkasa. Pesawat ruang angkasa akan terbang di atas bulan, menggunakan gravitasi bulan untuk mendapatkan kecepatan dan mendorong dirinya sendiri 70.000 kilometer dari bulan, hampir setengah juta kilometer dari Bumi – lebih jauh dari perjalanan manusia mana pun, karena akan memompa dirinya sendiri ke penerbangan retrograde yang jauh. berputar mengelilingi bulan. Dalam perjalanan pulangnya, Orion akan melakukan flyby lain di Bulan sebelum kembali ke Bumi. Perjalanan total akan memakan waktu sekitar 20 hari, dan berakhir dengan air yang mengalir ke Samudra Pasifik tanpa ESU – air itu terpisah dan terbakar di atmosfer tanpa membahayakan. Kredit: ESA – Badan Antariksa Eropa
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