Artemis 1's Attempt to Reclaim The Moon Blew Us Away

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  • Опубликовано: 26 янв 2023
  • Everything about the Artemis 1 mission to the Moon. Compare news coverage. Spot media bias. Avoid algorithms. Be well informed. Download the free Ground News app at ground.news/astrum
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    Image Credits: NASA/ESA/CNSA/SpaceX/Liam Yanulis/Cory Huston/StemRad/Rad Sinyak/Robert Markowitz/Lockheed Martin/NASA Johnson Space Center/NASA’s Goddard SpaceFlight Center/NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
    Music Credits: Cinematic Amb. Piano - BlackSunAeon_Music
    artemis 1 moon mission orion spacecraft space launch system

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @astrumspace
    @astrumspace  Год назад +88

    Compare news coverage. Spot media bias. Avoid algorithms. Be well informed. Download the free Ground News app at ground.news/astrum

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +6

      It was great working with you again, Alex!

    • @gebali
      @gebali Год назад +7

      One of the few -in-video ads I did not skip. Love Goundnews!

    • @gebali
      @gebali Год назад +3

      @@ground_news Love your work!

    • @rameyzamora1018
      @rameyzamora1018 Год назад +1

      I thought I WAS well informed. Alex tells me Columbus hit the Americas in the 16th century. How did I not know that for the last 70 years??

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +1

      @@gebali Thanks so much, Steve!

  • @alexmontgomery255
    @alexmontgomery255 Год назад +516

    I was 11 when Neil and Buzz first walked on the moon. I hope I live long enough to see the next group of explorers set foot there (and Mars too)!

    • @R0bertCc
      @R0bertCc Год назад +30

      I hope so to! You need to be able to say you saw first hand before heading to heaven! Either way have a good weekend!

    • @alexmontgomery255
      @alexmontgomery255 Год назад +16

      @@R0bertCc You too, thanks 🙂

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +16

      Did you watch it live on TV? What was it like?

    • @alexmontgomery255
      @alexmontgomery255 Год назад +37

      @@ground_news I did and it was amazing, a day that I’ll never forget.

    • @nathanielross8232
      @nathanielross8232 Год назад +31

      Same. We all gathered around a 13” black and white TV. Still remember it.

  • @adraino7345
    @adraino7345 Год назад +430

    It’s insanely impressive how much Andy Weir researched his novels. Sloshing was a critical part of the Martian even though it’s something 90% of readers never would have considered

    • @NathanaelNewton
      @NathanaelNewton Год назад +9

      Amazing books! I keep meaning to listen to the Artemis series of books but I haven't had a chance

    • @gebali
      @gebali Год назад +14

      Indeed. And "The Martin" book is worlds apart from the movie. Pardon the pun.

    • @NathanaelNewton
      @NathanaelNewton Год назад +5

      @@gebali yeah, that's pretty typical for books being made into movies I don't remember how I heard of it but I was able to read the book A couple of years before the movie was announced

    • @Thelaretus
      @Thelaretus Год назад +23

      @@NathanaelNewton Even The Lord of the Rings is a thousand times better than the films -- and the films are masterpieces.

    • @NathanaelNewton
      @NathanaelNewton Год назад +10

      @@Thelaretus maybe if it was a 30 episode TV series they would have had time to cover everything in the book 😂

  • @awolfeld
    @awolfeld Год назад +32

    Using the Stars to Navigate just like the Explorers of Old is so Beautifully Poetic

  • @SteveSiegelin
    @SteveSiegelin Год назад +60

    I was at the testflight of Artemis one as well as at quite a few different shuttle launches. I've noticed that for some reason SLS doesn't hit as hard in the chest when it launches. That was one of my favorite things about the space shuttle! When it launched you would feel an impact in your chest and a deep rumble. It surprised me how tame the shock waves from SLS are! This is a testament to the engineering that has gone into the rocket. The shock waves on the surrounding area are not near as violent even though the vehicle is larger.

    • @SteveSiegelin
      @SteveSiegelin Год назад +6

      @@ConnorisseurYT usually the hit is after it leaves the pad. I think it also has to do with the angle that the vehicles taking off. The shuttle was pointed slightly away from the crown on take off so the flame front was pointed toward the crowd and I believe that's why the shuttle was louder

  • @ground_news
    @ground_news Год назад +176

    It was great working with you again, Alex! It's really exciting to see these renewed initiatives to reach the moon (and beyond). I wasn't even alive the last time we went to the moon, but I distinctly remember being obsessed with the moon landings as a kid. The thought of returning definitely brings back that childhood wonder. Fantastic job on this video.
    And for any viewers who might be interested in learning more about Ground News, I'm happy to answer any questions you might have. Thanks!

    • @InDeepPudding
      @InDeepPudding Год назад +4

      no one cares brand

    • @alinaqirizvi1441
      @alinaqirizvi1441 Год назад +2

      You guys are way too Western biased

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +6

      @@alinaqirizvi1441 Hey there - we have 5 different editions you can choose from: US, Canada, UK, Europe and International. You can switch the edition at the top right corner of your screen. You can also follow specific countries to customize your My Feed with less western-centric news. Hope this helps!

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +6

      @@InDeepPudding 😥

    • @alinaqirizvi1441
      @alinaqirizvi1441 Год назад

      @@ground_news well I meant why don't you have more news agencies like PressTV, but instead you people focus on right-left bias rather than east-west

  • @mycroft16
    @mycroft16 Год назад +7

    That SLS launch was something else. Seeing the acoustic energy pulsing through the exhaust was amazing. And the views of the Earth from the Moon. That's one of the things I can not wait for as we make our way back... we'll get a monthly Earth-rise live stream. Hopefully they can keep Artemis 2 on schedule, I'm itching for progress.

  • @Professor_Sex
    @Professor_Sex Год назад +36

    seeing the milestones live was one of the coolest things I've experienced so far! Loved the timelapses too!

    • @holymackerel7704
      @holymackerel7704 Год назад +1

      thank you doctor sex

    • @Professor_Sex
      @Professor_Sex Год назад +3

      @@holymackerel7704 I love you

    • @wixostrix
      @wixostrix Год назад

      I didn't see this one live, but I did get up early to watch the JWST launch and it certainly was one of the coolest things to experience. Can't believe its already been over a year.

    • @Spartan086
      @Spartan086 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@wixostrix that launch was dope, I watched one of the many live streams as well

  • @umasubramanian2683
    @umasubramanian2683 Год назад +21

    I love all Andy Wier books. Can’t wait for his next one. The research he does and his attention to details made the harsh reality of living on Mars feel like it has already happened.

  • @klve1
    @klve1 Год назад +57

    Can you do a video breaking down the future of radiation protection from both high energy particles and high frequency EM radiation? I've always wondered what it would take to make a material or suite of materials light enough for space travel but robust enough to protect humans.

    • @8arrows
      @8arrows Год назад

      H2O protects life from radiation.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад

      Unobtainium should swing it .

    • @ramixpAPEX
      @ramixpAPEX Год назад

      There is none that's the problem

    • @ciberthej
      @ciberthej Год назад

      @@ramixpAPEX Because the hull of Artemis+heatshields+insulation is enough. Even if it’s high energy, just having something solid already reduces greatly radiation exposure to levels below what radiologists get on earth.
      And if by any chance they need more they just have to point the service module towards the sun and, voila! You have even more protection instantly.

    • @ciberthej
      @ciberthej Год назад

      Only danger to humans in space would be a big solar storm or a CME. Depending on the ship they can just point the engine section towards the sun and they’ll be mostly safe.
      When on the surface of the moon? Inside a LEM is better than nothing so they just stay inside.

  • @rabidspatula1013
    @rabidspatula1013 Год назад +5

    Epic video! Some exciting times ahead. Cannot wait to see the Artemis Lunar landings!

  • @AceSpadeThePikachu
    @AceSpadeThePikachu Год назад +12

    "Alexa, open the pod bay doors, please."
    "I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that until you renew your Amazon Prime subscription."
    Was this NOT on anybody's mind at NASA when they agreed to this deal with basically the real-life Lex Luthor/Ernst Stavro Blofeld/Dr. Evil?

    • @epion660
      @epion660 Год назад +5

      I'm more concerned about:
      "Alexa, open the fridge."
      "Opening airlock"
      "god dam-"

    • @AceSpadeThePikachu
      @AceSpadeThePikachu Год назад +1

      @@epion660 That too.

    • @Doctor_Eightball
      @Doctor_Eightball Год назад +1

      "Not until you finish watching _Crisis in Six Scenes,_ Dave."

  • @ElfSwarm
    @ElfSwarm Год назад +6

    Really love your videos!! Thank you so much for sharing all this knowledge and explaining it so well!!

  • @Earthneedsado-over177
    @Earthneedsado-over177 Год назад +15

    The engineering of these things is just jaw-dropping.

    • @Kraken9911
      @Kraken9911 Год назад +9

      It's amazing what we can create when the defense industry is able to spare some of the best minds in the world for non-defense projects.

  • @F1FanCanuck
    @F1FanCanuck Год назад +1

    Great video Alex. Your vids keep getting better and better.
    Beautifully captured the grandeur and scale of the Artemis mission.

  • @normalviewer740
    @normalviewer740 Год назад +1

    Let’s goo! Been watching for like a year now and I’m hopelessly hooked! Can’t wait for more!

  • @nielspemberton59
    @nielspemberton59 Год назад +10

    In the alternate world of 2001:A Space Odyssey Artimis 1 would have happened in 1981. The crew module Orion would have been named Diana 1.

  • @stevedow2740
    @stevedow2740 Год назад +5

    I was 21 at the time of the first moon landing. I'm now 75. 😊

  • @kalen1702
    @kalen1702 Год назад +1

    Next level visuals on this video. This is really television or streaming service quality and beyond. I hope that you can find some partnership with a streaming service for a mini series because you put out such top-tier stuff

  • @richard3769
    @richard3769 Год назад +4

    Another passionate video. Thanks for the update on Artimis 1

  • @juanmelendezrivera6085
    @juanmelendezrivera6085 Год назад +10

    Amazing journey of Orion in Artemis 1 mission. I'm worried about reentry to atmosphere. The capsule looked too burned out on recovery. Next missions will test the new larger Lunar Module. Good luck and best wishes to NASA 's return of human crews to the Moon. Thanks for the video.

  • @joeylewis8615
    @joeylewis8615 Год назад +14

    Alex, thank you so much for your well thought out video as always. Astrum is one of the very few youtube channels I allow my children to watch. My three year old is autistic and can identify every planet, dwarf plant, and moon in the solar system thanks to you. What most fascinates me about space travel is that we as humans seem to become one, no wars (so far), no prejudice, just grit, joy and comradery.. the best human traits seem to come out in space. Many astronauts have commented that while out there, home is not one's country, but the Earth, something we all share.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад +1

      I bet that goes down well with the politicians funding them .

    • @falsevacuum4667
      @falsevacuum4667 Год назад

      I generally agree with your sentiment. However, there was the case mentioned in this video of China landing a rover on the far side of the moon (the first to do so). Many in the West debated whether it was a "human achievement" or a "Chinese achievement". China itself felt content saying it was both, but many in the West felt difficulty identifying with China's success, especially Americans who are constantly used to hearing about "their" success through Nasa. What do you think?

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад

      @@falsevacuum4667 All humans are the same but divided by .000000001% of humans and controlled media for their own gains .Nationalism and patriotism are such a problem yet promoted internally everywhere. and internationalism is now a dirty socialist word . How socialism got demonized tells you a lot about the type of people in control . That type never mentions ruling class or the fact that nearly all productivity gains has enriched them and not the people doing the actual work . We live in feudal times without realizing it .

  • @sillysighbin8279
    @sillysighbin8279 Год назад +2

    I love this channel! So glad I found you!

  • @jonscotlad
    @jonscotlad Год назад +2

    I particularly liked the Star Trek clip 🤓 and how, completely coincidentally your video was 17:01 long! Great video, cheers!

  • @Tacsmoker
    @Tacsmoker Год назад +8

    cheers Astrum, It's always a pleasure seeing your uploads.

  • @DeathValleyDazed
    @DeathValleyDazed Год назад +10

    Maybe your best production yet. Completely inspiring. Go NASA! 🇺🇸🚀

  • @carmamd
    @carmamd Год назад +1

    Very pleasant, very informative! ESP. About what was studied and accomplished.🙏👏

  • @philipmurphy2
    @philipmurphy2 Год назад

    Always interesting to find content about Space.

  • @mrmango5118
    @mrmango5118 Год назад +4

    Love from Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Asia, Earth...
    You are doing a great job
    Keep it up... 😊...

  • @NathanaelNewton
    @NathanaelNewton Год назад +10

    380 Millisieverts per what? Hour? Minute? Day? Year?
    My portable gamma spectrometer dosimeter is currently measuring 45 Nano sieverts per hour..
    Based on the structure of the sentence I would assume year but it is a little bit ambiguous.
    I love all of your videos, keep making them please, they are amazing :-)

    • @Rudyard_Stripling
      @Rudyard_Stripling Год назад +1

      He says in the video a year

    • @thenewspacerace
      @thenewspacerace Год назад

      He said a year, bit the moon is a years worth in one day. His numbers are off because he's a radiation denier

    • @Rudyard_Stripling
      @Rudyard_Stripling Год назад

      @@thenewspacerace I have never doubted the first moon mission until now, compared to the new launch rocket and everything else that has been done to get to the moon again. How in the hail did they ever get to the moon the first time? It is a logical assumption now to question about the first moon landing by us to be a total fabrication.

    • @IAmTheDawn
      @IAmTheDawn Год назад +1

      You're not very intelligent, are you? Grow a brain, check back in once that's been done

  • @whisthpo
    @whisthpo Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed this presentation !

  • @silencedogood9835
    @silencedogood9835 Год назад +5

    As a direct grandson of Christopher Columbus, I disapprove of the positive spin he was given in this.

    • @tcf70tyrannosapiensbonsai
      @tcf70tyrannosapiensbonsai Год назад

      The whole movie is a whitewashing of elitary exploitaition. The moonlanding was the product of comparing the penissizes between USA and USB, em, -SR.

  • @chriswyoung1
    @chriswyoung1 Год назад +21

    I really enjoy your content Astrum!
    During re-entry I thought compression, not friction causes the heating of the spacecraft.

  • @pedromarrero
    @pedromarrero Год назад

    Awesome!! Nice work, I suscribe already 😀👍🏻

  • @mas13ish1
    @mas13ish1 Год назад +1

    Super well done. I will be subscribing for sure.

  • @diegopusineri472
    @diegopusineri472 Год назад +3

    10:56 So the mystery goo experiment is real? 🤯

  • @_P2M_
    @_P2M_ Год назад +4

    13:24
    It wasn't friction. It was mostly the compression of the air in front of the module that turned the air into plasma.

    • @petertaylor4758
      @petertaylor4758 Год назад

      I'm glad you mentioned that, I always thought it was friction lol

    • @petertaylor4758
      @petertaylor4758 Год назад

      @@amberlance182 not friction
      I google searched it because I thought it was

  • @nct948
    @nct948 Год назад +2

    I very much enjoyed your analogy between the drive to explore the New World and the one of space.

  • @PershijsmachnijKherson
    @PershijsmachnijKherson Год назад

    Hello, thanks for the interesting and beautiful video, great channel! Good luck!!!👌

  • @shantishanti1949
    @shantishanti1949 Год назад +4

    I remember watching Thunderbirds as a kid. The animation then to now is amazing. Re the space suits and radiation experience did the earlier astronauts suffer from cancers etc from their exposure ?

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Год назад +2

      @@amberlance182 The recent balloon shoot down was the thunderbirds are go version of the International Space Station and a go pro camera ! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @IAmTheDawn
      @IAmTheDawn Год назад

      You're way too old for that to be true - don't you mean you were in your late 30s when you watched Thunderbirds?

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Год назад

      @@IAmTheDawn thanks for the insult I am sure you are quite the prize yourself. Thunderbirds debut was 1965 and I was a kid.

    • @TheWokeFlatEarthTruth
      @TheWokeFlatEarthTruth Год назад

      Hi Steward, hope you are well. You asked "did the earlier astronauts suffer from cancers etc from their exposure ?" Yes, there is evidence that perhaps they did. A 2016 study compared the mortality rates of lunar astronauts who have passed away to astronauts who never flew and to those who have only made it to orbit. It found that the number of cardiovascular disease-related deaths among the deep space astronauts were significantly higher. (Apollo Lunar Astronauts Show Higher Cardiovascular Disease Mortality: Possible Deep Space Radiation Effects on the Vascular Endothelium, Michael Delp et al). Take care.

  • @roshansri1636
    @roshansri1636 Год назад +5

    Orion 1? If anything it is Orion CM-002 after the first one during EFT-1 in 2014 and also technically the mission is named Artemis 1

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 Год назад

    thankyou for another great video..
    will they be able to re- use the part that was left in orbit..?

  • @grovedas
    @grovedas Год назад +2

    Respectfully, please note that Christopher Columbus set sail in 1492--which was in the 15th Century, not the 16th Century.

  • @easternyellowjacket276
    @easternyellowjacket276 Год назад +4

    I don't understand all the radiation concern by NASA about sending astronauts to the moon. We already did it, and they made it back safe and lived long lives. Some are still alive. So I don't understand all the concern about cosmic radiation. Didn't they already figure all that out with our first journey's to the moon? Also, the Apollo astronauts were capable of flying the craft, so why the extensive concern about autopilot, or the capsule going behind the moon?

    • @jamesryan3572
      @jamesryan3572 Год назад +3

      It's important to test the new systems and technology - we are not using Apollo spacecraft anymore, and the Orion craft must be tested. Additionally, the Orion program will use different mission plans that take different paths, and they want to make sure those new paths are safe.

    • @TheWokeFlatEarthTruth
      @TheWokeFlatEarthTruth Год назад

      @@jamesryan3572 Also modern electronics and IC's are more susceptible to radiation damage than the discrete component electronics used in the Apollo missions.

  • @who-ny5oe
    @who-ny5oe Год назад +4

    Like Buzz Lightyear once said:
    To infinity and beyond!

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Год назад

      Buzz Lightyear said that many, many times, ad infinitum.

  • @pacefactor
    @pacefactor Год назад +2

    Astronaut: Open the pod bay doors Alexa.
    Alexa: I'm sorry, I can't do that.
    Astronaut: Alexa... Open the pod bay doors...
    Alexa: Connect Amazon Music to play specific songs on your device; starting radio for "The Doors"...
    Astronaut: ALEXA! OPEN THE POD BAY DOORS!
    Alexa: *di-dun*

  • @NiX_aKi
    @NiX_aKi Год назад +1

    I truly enjoyed this episode. Thank you 🍻

  • @retroboomer3197
    @retroboomer3197 Год назад +6

    All I can say is that there had better be a live feed and communication. If we could do it the first time, we can surely do it now, and in HD.

  • @uggman9
    @uggman9 Год назад +3

    This mission is really putting into context the first moon landing, if you think about it why is nasa doing so much research on how space travel would affect humans while in the 60s they just didnt or forgot, like it was explained space is extremly hostile and i doubt technology from 6 decades ago could do the trip and today in 2023 we cant and its not a matter of budget is just that the technology is finally catchin up.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Год назад

      I think it's important to remember that the moon landing in 1969 was an incredible feat of engineering and ingenuity. The success of the mission relied on the hard work and dedication of the individuals involved. While space travel has obviously become much more complicated and involved in the intervening years, the success of the Apollo 11 mission should be celebrated and remembered as a major milestone in human history. Furthermore, to suggest that the mission could have been faked or that the technology of the time was insufficient is simply baseless speculation that is not supported by any scientific evidence.

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Год назад

    Beautiful presentation.

  • @SlapbackGOD
    @SlapbackGOD Год назад

    You have amazing script skills ❤️

  • @poolboy9862
    @poolboy9862 Год назад +3

    I don't care if I have to beg, borrow or steal.. I WILL be at the launch when they send humans back! Unfortunately I was only 4 months old when Neil and Buzz touched down the first time.
    And God-willing, I hope I get to see humans step out and touch Mars. I'll pretty much be an old fossil by then, but with any luck I'll get to see it. My kids will certainly see it and who knows.. maybe they'll be on the spacecraft that goes.

  • @mickeyfilmer5551
    @mickeyfilmer5551 Год назад +3

    I watched Apollo 11 touchdown live at about 5am UTC aged 9- and look forward to seeing it in better quality this time around- Hopefully , ...if I am still here!!😁

    • @R0bertCc
      @R0bertCc Год назад

      Well I hope you are to be able to see you saw it more than one time to see the achievement of our generation. Take care!

  • @puppy1584
    @puppy1584 Год назад

    Thank you for uploading this very interesting item.

  • @emmacavalier
    @emmacavalier Год назад

    Fantastic opening!!

  • @invin7215
    @invin7215 11 месяцев назад +2

    5:14 we must understand the science of boobs in space

  • @dapivimu
    @dapivimu Год назад +6

    As a Mexican, people like Arturo Campos only makes us dream big and know that we could achieve great things . So proud 🇲🇽🇺🇸

    • @IAmTheDawn
      @IAmTheDawn Год назад

      I wouldn't gamble too much on that one.

  • @florah555
    @florah555 Год назад +2

    I met Apollo 17 commander Eugene Cernan in a local library many years ago. That was a great moment in my life. I still have his signature with me. They are true heroes went to moon many years ago with little help of technology. Today we have better technology, why still can not send people go to the moon.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Год назад +1

      Indeed, it is remarkable how far we have come since the Apollo 17 mission. We now have the technology to send people back to the Moon, but our understanding of evolutionary biology has also advanced. One example of this is Carcinisation, a type of convergent evolution in which a crustacean evolves into a crab-like form from a non-crab-like form. This is an example of how nature can take a seemingly random direction and create something beautiful.

  • @kalsizzle
    @kalsizzle Год назад +2

    The future of space travel is looking bright! I am very optimistic!

  • @theayeguy5226
    @theayeguy5226 Год назад +11

    Artemis is great technology and what we have now, but it's the same throwaway concept we went to the Moon with in the 1960s. What we need to have a viable space exploration effort is to have fully reusable vehicles! Single Stage To Orbit, or at least Two Stage ala Sanger. Also, a true space station where the missions will depart from and arrive back to, not a capsule hurtling back into the atmosphere at high velocities

    • @rundownaxe
      @rundownaxe Год назад +6

      Sure. How do we get there? One step at a time.
      I'm sure Elon has a spot reserved for the guy who could do what you want faster. We simply must learn and develop. How many rocket did we launch in the 60s? I say give it a decade.

    • @ekscalybur
      @ekscalybur Год назад +6

      Fully reusable for LEO, sure.
      Fully reusable for beyond is simply a waste of effort, time, money, resources and most importantly, deltaV. It's actually kinda moronic to even suggest such a thing.
      The lunar missions are for that space station. A station in translunar space opens the rest of the solar system. The Moon is the gateway. A station in Earth orbit barely helps, as you're still nearly all the way inside the Earth gravity well.

  • @theastronomer5800
    @theastronomer5800 Год назад

    Amazing technological achievement! Can't wait for part 2...

  • @Darren-jo4if
    @Darren-jo4if 11 месяцев назад

    This mission really showcases just how daring the Opollo missions were...crazy!!

  • @modallas8034
    @modallas8034 Год назад

    As usual, it's a beautiful video.
    Keep up the great work.
    👍👍👍

  • @MrWaldorfian
    @MrWaldorfian Год назад +4

    Why do you call it Orion 1? Its Artemis 1.

    • @YouTubalcaine
      @YouTubalcaine Год назад +3

      Artemis is the mission, Orion is the spacecraft.

    • @MrWaldorfian
      @MrWaldorfian Год назад +4

      @@YouTubalcaine its not even the first Orion to fly. 🤷🏻

  • @skyblock_mouse
    @skyblock_mouse Год назад +14

    Fun fact: astrum in another language means star

    • @dylangtech
      @dylangtech Год назад +2

      “Cosmonaut” means “Space Sailor”, whereas “Astronaut” means “Star Sailor”.

    • @JamesKintner
      @JamesKintner Год назад +2

      Latin... for fun?

    • @grahamnalepa4622
      @grahamnalepa4622 Год назад

      Why didn't you say it's in " Hindi " ? 🤔 And, in Hindi...Astrum could mean Star or Constellation.

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 Год назад

      maybe that's why they used it?

    • @fredcat9080
      @fredcat9080 Год назад +1

      Fun fact: a strum is how I play guitar.

  • @npsit1
    @npsit1 Год назад +1

    I can't wait.. 7:46 "Alexa, open the door." "I'm sorry, Dave. I can't do that."

  • @tommy-er6hh
    @tommy-er6hh Год назад

    While a wonderful coverage of a mission where they learned a lot, some how I am kinda saddened they we have forgotten or thrown away so much that we have to learn so much all over again.

  • @jmack20093
    @jmack20093 Год назад +3

    Imagine how the engineers felt sending a voice command to an AI and then listening to the response for telemetry instead of just looking at their screens.. Useful!

    • @epion660
      @epion660 Год назад +4

      "Alexa, open the telemetry data."
      "Opening airlock"
      " *sigh* god damn it"

  • @beansinacan500
    @beansinacan500 Год назад +3

    I've always wondered if space craft like Orion 1 are "bullet proof" since there is a chance a high speed micro meteor could strike

    • @AstronAndry
      @AstronAndry Год назад +10

      They probably are, since although bullets are a lot heavier than micro meteorites, KE = 1/2m x v^2, so velocity is more important.
      The micrometeorites might impact at, say, 3000m/s, whilst bullets go at about 1000m/s tops.
      This means that the micrometeorites have 3x the velocity, so even if the micrometeorites were ⅛th the mass, it would still have more KE. And this is using an estimate of an impact velocity well below LEO orbital velocity (8km/s). It could probably go up to maybe 15km/s relative.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад +2

      Of course they are not .

  • @CGMaat
    @CGMaat Год назад

    Wow - quintessential - thank you!

  • @manug6334
    @manug6334 Год назад +2

    I just checked if there was a new video, and I was very sad there wasn’t. Went to get a glass of milk and came back and was confused about how to feel. Astrum is watching me

  • @skyblock_mouse
    @skyblock_mouse Год назад +3

    Hello I really like your content and I relllly like space

    • @elleni-41
      @elleni-41 Год назад

      Thats y were here, love of space..😅😅

    • @skyblock_mouse
      @skyblock_mouse Год назад +1

      @@elleni-41 yeah it is beautiful

  • @JjackVideo
    @JjackVideo Год назад +3

    "Lets find out the radiation levels for future human flights"
    Didn't they do that already back in the day?

  • @LunCoSim
    @LunCoSim Год назад

    Thx!
    How it affects plans to build Lunar Colony?

  • @NoahSpurrier
    @NoahSpurrier Год назад +1

    Great video.

  • @johanwinnem7532
    @johanwinnem7532 Год назад +3

    if we did this 50 years ago.. how is it still hard xD

    • @KyleDoesRandom155
      @KyleDoesRandom155 Год назад +6

      Why do you think Apollo 13 happened

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +6

      Because it was hard back then - and today's missions are a hell of a lot more ambitious than just going somewhere and coming back ASAP.

    • @JamesKintner
      @JamesKintner Год назад +1

      I've heard from a few sources that the Apollo missions were incredibly cowboy in nature, I don't know that we have the same motivation today, or willingness to lose lives. Ultimately, we want to go to space and not die. It's hard to do that.

    • @lepperkin
      @lepperkin Год назад +1

      It was WAY more expensive back then, and it was just to stay there for a few days. This is to establish a permanent presence on and around the moon, and they had to develop completely new technologies since the old ones were so expensive.

    • @AndrasMihalyi
      @AndrasMihalyi Год назад +4

      Mount everest's peak was first reached 70 years ago. "How is it still hard 🤪"

  • @foxmccloud7055
    @foxmccloud7055 Год назад +1

    One thing about Artemis I from my perspective was that with the launch experience, my heart was really thumping big time. Before the launch, we're well aware that we had to endure three launch scrubs due to faulty engine sensors, a hydrogen leak, and two major hurricanes. (Hurricane Ian and Hurricane Nicole)I was surprised by just how bright the launch was, I have seen plenty of night launches, but I was surprised by how bright it really was as it turned night into day and it was as if I was looking at the rising sun. It's a good thing that they don't measure heartbeats because mine was through the roof. I kept my church (Trinity United Methodist Church in Grand Island, Nebraska) informed on how the mission was going. When Orion was in earth orbit, I was taken aback by the view of earth. It was as if I was onboard. Later, when Orion was orbiting the moon, I was amazed at the view of the moon and earth, giving everyone the impression that everything that we have on our planet is behind the moon. It really does, in my opinion, give me the impression that everything is irrelevant in the cosmos. On the way back, I was taken aback by the view of earth coming closer and closer and doing one of our church I was telling everyone that Orion was coming home in a couple of hours and then doing our contemporary church service, I was watching the reentry of Orion and hoping that everything is going well and then when those main parachutes deployed and Orion was on the water, that I knew and told everyone that Orion was home and the church erupted in excitement that Orion was home and everything went well. In closing, I would like to say that everything went incredibly well and I can't wait till Artemis II is launched, It is going to be exciting and thrilling.

  • @IraclisPapadopoulos
    @IraclisPapadopoulos Год назад

    WOW This was a perfect one!!

  • @physicsbutawesome
    @physicsbutawesome Год назад

    Love that thumbnail, bro!

  • @jgunther3398
    @jgunther3398 Год назад +1

    something that's often overlooked is the earlier frontiers had air. easy to overlook i guess...

  • @harrybeaumont0621
    @harrybeaumont0621 Год назад +2

    Great exploration mission , keep it up NASA .

  • @ellenroehl6022
    @ellenroehl6022 Год назад +1

    "Open the pod bay door, Alexa."
    "I can't do that, Dave."

  • @Yezpahr
    @Yezpahr Год назад

    6:39 woah, that utterly detonated. Epic shot.

  • @gecsus
    @gecsus Год назад +2

    At 9:20 you stated that NASA is concerned with astronaut safety. I hope they have changed from the rush to prove themselves that caused the loss of life on Columbia. That was a preventable tragedy that will forever sit upon NASA's irresponsibility in launching when the engineers warned them it was prone to failure. They did so simply to meet standards to get more money instead of caring about the astronauts. I was part of the Space Shuttle program in that the company I worked for and my division and location made the computer control cables which I personally inspected. We were all horrified at NASA's disregard for Engineering warnings regarding seal failure. I truly hope that their motivations have changed.

    • @IAmTheDawn
      @IAmTheDawn Год назад

      shut up. their goals are 10000000% beyond your understanding. Let the grownups handle this one.

    • @gecsus
      @gecsus Год назад +2

      @@IAmTheDawn Yeah, you da ex spert. 😂🤣
      Maybe look in the mirror. I personally inspected the Space Shuttle's Computer Control cables.
      I'm an Engineer.
      Maybe you should consider reading a little more before speaking out of the wrong end of your body.
      The Flight Engineers warned NASA not to let the launch occur when the temperature was below a given threshold, and NASA ignored them and that is why the Columbia exploded. Grow up and get educated before you ensure everyone knows how uninformed, and pitifully prideful you are.

  • @tonybaker55
    @tonybaker55 Год назад +1

    This presentation would be fantastic to be used in primary schools to teach about space travel.

  • @devil8877
    @devil8877 Год назад

    Love from India love your videos and space is just marvelous💯❤️🙏

    • @IAmTheDawn
      @IAmTheDawn Год назад

      I love what your country had done for scamming. genius

  • @KimboSmudge
    @KimboSmudge Год назад

    Could you please do a solar system basics video?

  • @user-pq1js1bz6h
    @user-pq1js1bz6h Год назад

    Great video

  • @moritzheintze7615
    @moritzheintze7615 Год назад +2

    *The Incredible Journey to the Moon and Back* took place in December 1968. Orion will most likely become the record holder for the capsule to become obsolete after the least number of manned flights. The future of human spaceflight will not take place as a Apollo re-eneactmet but in a setup like the dearMoon mission.

  • @goldgamercommenting2990
    @goldgamercommenting2990 Год назад +1

    Fun fact Orion’s first orbital mission was on a delta 4 heavy and it went flawless so it was no brainer if sls would do the exact same thing

  • @SiriProject
    @SiriProject Год назад

    I would be amazing to have one of these static cam streams 24/7 from the moon, working on solar energy.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Год назад

      Well it would be totally dark for about 14 days at a time during the 'Lunar night', during which time of course there would be no 'solar energy'. I imagine it would be a difficult challenge to keep the equipment running in temperatures swinging from 120C to -130C, over a monthly period. And it certainly wouldn't be a 24/7 service for much of that time.
      I'm not saying it would be impossible, but certainly very expensive - which is probably why nobody has bothered to do such, especially for so little gain.

    • @SiriProject
      @SiriProject Год назад

      @@sunnyjim1355 I think the only real problem are the extreme temperatures, which affect circuits really bad. Regarding energy it could deactivate for such periods, and the lag is almost minimal. Sadly, it makes you think how hard it would be creating a permanent base if we can't even get a cam working up there.

  • @AriannaEuryaleMusic
    @AriannaEuryaleMusic Год назад

    AWESOME!!

  • @jimmytiddlytoo8160
    @jimmytiddlytoo8160 Год назад +1

    “Alexa open the pod bay doors”
    “I’m sorry Dave, I can’t let you jeopardize our delivery”

  • @tangerinesky1293
    @tangerinesky1293 Год назад +1

    My son wants to be an astronaut and I show him your videos often because of the real footage. He doesn't watch them all the way through due to his young age but maybe one day.

  • @Emptychurchhouseministrysmitch
    @Emptychurchhouseministrysmitch Год назад +1

    how did they get there last time?

  • @jessiestar1081
    @jessiestar1081 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @nealb6974
    @nealb6974 Год назад

    3:36 What are those numbers of t, surely its not the weight of the rockets right?

  • @kyoku1982
    @kyoku1982 Год назад

    I see an overlooked problem here... Real humans wont be able to resist messing with Alexa.

  • @thegzak
    @thegzak Год назад +1

    Apparently the heat from reentry isn’t because of the friction against the air along the sides but rather the compression of the air at the front

  • @geraldinefields1730
    @geraldinefields1730 Год назад

    Thank you.