The Artemis II astronauts will blast their main engine Thursday evening to propel the Orion capsule out of Earth’s orbit and on to its next phase — a four-day journey toward the moon.
The six-minute engine burn is a pivotal move that will put the astronauts on a trajectory that humans haven’t traveled in more than half a century. Going beyond Earth’s orbit comes with a host of risks, such as the sheer distance from home if anything goes awry, and the health effectsof exposure to deep-space radiation from solar activity or cosmic rays once the astronauts are beyond the protection of Earth’s magnetic field.
NASA officials gave the okay to the “translunar injection” maneuver Thursday afternoon, after extensive checks of life-support systems and other operations gave them confidence that the spacecraft and crew were ready to go.
“We love those words, and we’re loving the view,” mission commander Reid Wiseman said, after hearing that NASA had given the approval.
“That’s one of the big, big events in the mission,” Jake Bleacher, chief exploration scientist at NASA, said in an interview from Kennedy Space Center hours before the burn. “Really leaving Earth’s orbit … to conduct the rest of the mission … I think that will definitely make a number of people both up on the Orion and here on Earth breathe a little easier.”
Every day of the 10-day journey aboard the Orion capsule is busy, and the astronauts started Thursday at 7:06 a.m., with the team on the ground in Houston playing the song “Sleepyhead” by the band Young and Sick. They ignited the main engine for 43 seconds to position the spacecraft in a stable high Earth orbit, in preparation for departure for the moon. Then, they rested until a second wake-up call — the song “Green Light” by John Legend.
At 7:49 p.m., the engines will fire for five minutes and 49 seconds, a burst of energy that will change the Orion capsule’s speed by 1,272 feet per second to position the spacecraft for its journey to the moon. On Monday, it is expected to reach its farthest point from Earth, and astronauts will see the far side of the moon, including parts that astronauts have never seen because the Apollo missions arrived when parts of the moon were shrouded in darkness.
“Depending on the precise timing when they get there, they will probably see some parts of the lunar surface on the far side sunlit that the Apollo astronauts did not have an opportunity to see,” Bleacher said. They will also be there for an eclipse, when the moon blocks the sun, allowing them to observe the enigmatic outermost layer of the sun’s atmosphere, the corona.
The astronauts will also test science operations on the far side of the moon, helping NASA understand how human crews at the moon can collaborate with science teams on Earth, Bleacher said.
Orion will slingshot around the moon and return on a trajectory that takes advantage of the gravitational pull of the Earth, without requiring propulsion. That will bring the crew to one of the most hair-raising parts of the mission: the reentry into Earth’s atmosphere, ending with splashdown in the Pacific Ocean next Friday.
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