Artemis 1 Launch From East Orlando - 50+ miles from the launchpad.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • We are 50+ miles from Cape Canaveral. This may have been the largest and brightest launch we’ve seen in 26+ years.
    Audio is from the Twitter stream at NASA as we listened to their feed during launch.

Комментарии • 167

  • @ryansutter4291
    @ryansutter4291 Год назад +6

    I live in Altamonte Springs about 15 minutes from downtown Orlando and I was at UCF at the time. And I'll never forget seeing this. It was the brightest launch I've ever seen in my life and I've lived in Florida for 35 years now and been lucky enough to have seen the Space Shuttle launches and SpaceX missions go up from the Cape. I've seen them at the Cape, where the ground shakes for miles and miles around, and still; I've tried to describe what the SLS launch was like to people. It literally turned night to day, it honestly looked like a rising nuclear explosion for a minute or so. Even after it was gone its smoke trail was so high, and so large, in the sky that the sun was still shining through, illuminating it, even though it was nighttime at the ground level. It was absolutely fantastic and the most beautiful launch I've ever seen in my life. I wish I had been at the Cape to see it. I regret not having my phone out but I just wanted to take it in. The launches from the Cape have always been some of the cooler things Florida has to offer. If you ever get a chance to see a launch, especially AT THE CAPE; Do it. You won't regret it. It's like nothing in the world...

  • @DarkWater4Eva
    @DarkWater4Eva Год назад +74

    I don't know about you guys but that night, seeing the rocket and its "destination" in the same shot is spectacular, beautiful and touching. Knowing that thing is on its way to the moon is awe-inspiring.

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      Knowing it lands in the ocean means you are not fooled any more

    • @crazykokebroz
      @crazykokebroz Год назад +8

      @@shawnhawkins53 Don't believe in that crap.

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      @@crazykokebroz go brainwash with believers that can be controlled by the lies

    • @crazykokebroz
      @crazykokebroz Год назад +6

      @@shawnhawkins53 you just described yourself.

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      @@crazykokebroz yes I am free

  • @nonamewithoutacause6465
    @nonamewithoutacause6465 Год назад +49

    Oh boy! We as humans can achieve higher things but we aren't able to recognize ourselves and possibilities...Sometimes we can! Awesome! Thank you!

  • @westhuizenarchives2614
    @westhuizenarchives2614 Год назад +13

    Imagine, a flat earther lives in Orlando. He types on an Artemis I stream "This is all fake, there is no Artemis rocket launc-" then he proceeds to look out his window and see a new sun rise at 12am.

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад +2

      That would make them say “OHH WAIT THE SUN IS FAKE! THATS HOW THEY MADE THE SUN!”

  • @acidbubblebath77
    @acidbubblebath77 Год назад

    Thank you for actually posting the entire event from start to finish and with no music in the background.
    It is refreshing to see this against the tide of impatient, ADHD quasi-RUclips Tik Tokers who seem incapable of posting anything longer than 5 seconds, each with a bunch of stupid, ear bleeding music in the background.
    EDIT: The audio feed of the launch is also something no one else does either.

  • @maytheus
    @maytheus Год назад +17

    Awesome video! Amazing watching it light up the neighborhood like daytime and then head downrange and into orbit!

  • @quatlewmeez
    @quatlewmeez Год назад

    I remember departing my Carnival Cruise at 7:30am, 2 miles away, the morning of it's initial launch . No one in the port had wifi/data so we all stood and waited for Liftoff until 12pm only to find out that it had been postponed. Maybe next time. Thanks for this video bro

  • @randypick1
    @randypick1 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing, neat to see both rocket and moon both.

  • @MrJackHackney
    @MrJackHackney Год назад +28

    Amazing. Your audio feed of the launch was behind by about 30 seconds. You could see the light of the engines below the horizon at liftoff.

    • @GonkDroid0923
      @GonkDroid0923 Год назад +2

      It's cause of the sound delay. It took the sound 30 seconds to travel from the Launchpad, to the person in Orlando

    • @jacquescelere5693
      @jacquescelere5693 Год назад +13

      @@GonkDroid0923 He doesn't talk about the engines sound but the commentaries.

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад

      It was very far, the sound took time to get to him.

    • @DonVideoGuy007
      @DonVideoGuy007 Год назад

      @@jacquescelere5693 Correct - "The light of the engines" was actually the igniters for the 4 rockets and the 2 solid rocket detachable boosters which ignited about 20 seconds before the vehicle left the launch pad.

    • @russells9687
      @russells9687 Год назад

      You're listening to a "live" commercial radio or TV broadcast -- or something from the Internet. That derivative "sound" is always about 30 seconds behind real life.

  • @captaindaedalus1
    @captaindaedalus1 Год назад

    Thanks for putting this on RUclips.

  • @LinngahPremi
    @LinngahPremi Год назад +7

    This is so beautiful to see it go to the moon up in space...perfect timing😍💝🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @craig_ramjet990
    @craig_ramjet990 Год назад +2

    Making a power lap around the planet before swinging out towards the moon. That was beautiful to watch and filmed very well. Thank You!

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад +1

      It was getting into orbit, it wasn’t a power lap. Then it would reach its transfer window to get to the moon.

  • @andresvalentin6924
    @andresvalentin6924 11 месяцев назад

    I lived in Orlando back in 2010 and got to see a space shuttle launch in the middle of the night. I remember seeing that exact intense glow in the East as if the Sun was about to come up. Amazing to watch!

  • @Размер_Шаров
    @Размер_Шаров Год назад +6

    Launched up and soon went down beyond the horizon. Amazing.

    • @KiwiKiwf
      @KiwiKiwf Год назад +3

      slaps the flat earthers with a proof that the earth is round 😂😂

    • @Размер_Шаров
      @Размер_Шаров Год назад +1

      @@KiwiKiwf no. They might say, rocket just fall behind the earth edge.

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад +1

      @@KiwiKiwf flat earthers would say “ohh they crashed it into the ocean!!”

  • @Thanatos9029
    @Thanatos9029 Год назад +1

    I used to live in Orlando until about 3 years ago. I watched Rockets from my front lawn but none of them came as close to as bright and magnificent as this.

  • @thepro2412
    @thepro2412 Год назад

    WOOW that was amazing, love the delay of the feed though lol

  • @TheSpaceflightGuy
    @TheSpaceflightGuy Год назад +3

    This was the brightest rocket launch ever. Great video!

  • @Geekus
    @Geekus Год назад +1

    What beautiful framing, being able to capture the moon in your shot, it gives the launch an iconic geometry. Very well done!

  • @jondellar
    @jondellar Год назад +2

    Really something to see that from your own street. I’m guessing the sound reached you about 4-5 mins later.

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 Год назад +5

    1:44 It's so bright it's making a sun pillar in the clouds overhead

    • @hubbletrubble7875
      @hubbletrubble7875 Год назад +1

      omg you're right

    • @KimJungDwayne
      @KimJungDwayne Год назад

      I got a video on my channel from 85-90 linear miles north of the launch pad. And it was cloudy. But lit the sky orange and when it poked through the clouds it was like the sun rising lol I would say ppl couldve easily watched this from 250-300 miles away

  • @jrmoore4105
    @jrmoore4105 Год назад +1

    Amazing video

  • @applejacks971
    @applejacks971 Год назад +8

    Shouldn't take too long for the rocket to get there, the moon was just on the other side of the clouds :)
    Awesome video! Here in Nebraska we get to see airplanes fly over now and again lol!

    • @TheRealLaughingGravy
      @TheRealLaughingGravy Год назад +6

      The downside is they're always going to have to launch at night, when the moon is out. The astronauts will get sleepy.

    • @camdenretter3226
      @camdenretter3226 Год назад +1

      That's not how it works, they don't launch it directly at the moon, because the moon would just orbit out of the way and the spacecraft would travel out to the distance of the moon, but not encounter it - and come back. They launch like a normal mission to the ISS at first, going into Low Earth Orbit, before performing what's called a trans-lunar injection after an orbit or two, which kicks their apogee (highest elevation in an orbit) up to the distance of the moon. The moon could have been showing on the other side of the world and it would have gotten there in the same amount of time. Orbital mechanics Is fun!

    • @alfredforbessealy524
      @alfredforbessealy524 Год назад +1

      @@camdenretter3226 "Irony [uncountable] the use of words that say the opposite of what you really mean, often as a joke and with a tone of voice that shows this" ~Oxford dic.

    • @camdenretter3226
      @camdenretter3226 Год назад

      @@alfredforbessealy524 stupidity noun
      /stuˈpɪdət̮i/
      (pl. stupidities)
      [uncountable, countable, usually plural] behavior that shows a lack of thought or good judgment
      [uncountable] the state or quality of being slow to learn and not intelligent ~Oxford dic
      Go study orbital mechanics and astrophysics for 5 years and come back. Sure, it doesn't make sense to the layman but when you know what you're talking about in terms of physics and can visualize orbits in your head - it makes perfect sense. I find it funny when people insult someone because they're butthurt that they don't understand the concept in which they are talking about. Best feeling ever encountering people like you.

  • @anthonymullen6300
    @anthonymullen6300 Год назад

    That's a beautiful shot and the Moon in frame as well. Have a nice day from Ireland 🇮🇪

  • @GetUsum03
    @GetUsum03 Год назад

    Thanks sharing amazing

  • @gerardmoran9560
    @gerardmoran9560 Год назад +2

    Nice catch! Even way up here in Charleston, SC I could see the Shuttle when it launched to the ISS (northeast climb) starting about 25 seconds into the climb. Miss that. I think the smoke you saw is what's called a distrail (dissipation trail). Jets make them when cruising just above a smooth cloud deck. The heat from the engines causes the water in the atmosphere to dissipate. In this case the lack of reflective moisture looked dark.

  • @BilalHeuser1
    @BilalHeuser1 Год назад

    Totally awesome. When I lived in Pine Hills, I could see some of the Apollo rockets taking off.

  • @Jackspace.
    @Jackspace. Год назад

    You live in a perfect place my dream brother

  • @planetsec9
    @planetsec9 Год назад

    People tend to think about it the wrong way you have to stop thinking in terms of "up" and think in terms of "sideways" when it comes to spaceflight. The moon, Earth and Kennedy Space Center are in good alignment on the orbital plane ( when you look at it sideways) for Orion to reach where the moon will be in space in a few days time and thus be pulled in by its gravity

  • @hedleythorne
    @hedleythorne Год назад +1

    That is something else. Awesome.

  • @Killbayne
    @Killbayne Год назад +4

    rocket deniers be like "it was a reverse meteor"

  • @retrofan42
    @retrofan42 Год назад

    You got some great video! I was in Orlando in early 1984 (January or February) at Nuclear Power School when the base was there (Baldwin Park subdivision is there now), and we got to see a Space Shuttle launch one clear morning.

  • @alldaybythebay8480
    @alldaybythebay8480 Год назад

    Ladies and gentleman, we’re going back to the moon baby!!!!!!

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
    @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Год назад +4

    Well, it looks like they pointed the rocket pretty much in the right direction....

  • @AgentPepsi1
    @AgentPepsi1 Год назад

    OMG!!! Incredible!!! 😳😳😊😊😊

  • @kerbberbphotography8336
    @kerbberbphotography8336 Год назад

    Aye, I was the same distance when I was taking footage of this launch. Was honestly amazing.

  • @MrHenkfromHolland
    @MrHenkfromHolland Год назад +1

    Awesome

  • @drone_boss
    @drone_boss Год назад

    Awesome!

  • @harryjamessmithmusic7762
    @harryjamessmithmusic7762 Год назад +1

    Brilliant! OMG!

  • @Edeskenney
    @Edeskenney Год назад +1

    How come no one is out to see such a wonderful thing like that?

  • @Yonkage-ik5qb
    @Yonkage-ik5qb Год назад

    The beginning looks like an actual sunrise behind deep fog, sped up.

  • @TycoonTitian01
    @TycoonTitian01 Год назад

    from florida, just wanna remind yall, it was 3am when they launched, thats not sunlight

  • @niraj_dave
    @niraj_dave Год назад +1

    dude seriously 50+ miles?...that thing is really lighting up whole world..that's quite something.

  • @steviebboy69
    @steviebboy69 Год назад

    Amazing that it was so bright at launch from that distance, that would have to be around 80 or more KM and it shows you how bright it must be.

    • @KimJungDwayne
      @KimJungDwayne Год назад

      They are not that bright .. something about the artemis launch was 1 of a kind. I have a video on my channel from 85-90miles north of the launch pad. It lit the sky orange i would say it was visible from atleast 300 miles away.. it was insane.. other launches are not like this 1

  • @puppiesarepower3682
    @puppiesarepower3682 Год назад

    The SLS is nuts. No wonder it damaged parts of the launch facility.

  • @88997799
    @88997799 Год назад

    Damn you luck SOB… What a spot to live and get to see that. And ya got the moon is sign! Well, considering that’s it’s destination you would hope it would launch that way. See challenger shuttle?

  • @rickl6843
    @rickl6843 Год назад

    Pretty cool

  • @ChristosapherDre
    @ChristosapherDre Год назад

    left florida 22 years ago but ill always remember seeing those shuttles from oviedo

  • @tenminutetokyo2643
    @tenminutetokyo2643 Год назад

    That’s a heck of a street.

  • @vincerobledo6502
    @vincerobledo6502 Год назад

    Great capture!

  • @CZac2k12
    @CZac2k12 Год назад

    Yes, we always had the ability to go to space and still possess this capability. Most people don't know that this reality is not new. The SLS vehicle is new. NASA had the Saturn V and the Space Shuttle. Fly Baby Fly!! 🌎🚀🌕😍

  • @adrianinglis5922
    @adrianinglis5922 Год назад +1

    I want to live right there.

  • @redacted8983
    @redacted8983 Год назад

    That ignition was so bright, you thought the sun is about to rise

  • @sgregg5257
    @sgregg5257 Год назад

    Sound delay is due to a built in delay in the hardware for broadcasting. All "live" is delayed by about 30 seconds. This allows for on-the-spot editing should something transpire. Someone saying "Fuck Yeah!" could be edited out without compromising the live broadcast.

  • @dalel3608
    @dalel3608 Год назад +1

    Goddamn goosebumps.

  • @ThePengu_96
    @ThePengu_96 Год назад +1

    * free bird echos quietly in the far distance *

  • @mickyday2008
    @mickyday2008 Год назад

    Amazing

  • @disgustedpotato6564
    @disgustedpotato6564 Год назад +1

    crazy that the rocket is delayed like 0.0003 seconds cause of light

    • @stbufraba
      @stbufraba Год назад

      Actually about 0.0003 s , if you really wanted to calculate it.

  • @dannmann17
    @dannmann17 Год назад

    Awesome video👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @adioprotege
    @adioprotege Год назад

    Does the sound ever reach you? Can you hear the rocket at all from where you are?

  • @mountainstatematt
    @mountainstatematt Год назад

    This is a cool video!

  • @creedonc1285
    @creedonc1285 Год назад +1

    Wow

  • @transistor281
    @transistor281 Год назад

    whoever coughed in the beginning, do you have Afib have you been tested for it? Do you get the feather tickling your heart sensation?

  • @foosiemac
    @foosiemac Год назад

    Great Shot...hard to understand why none of your neighbors came outside to watch such an important event.

  • @Doggeslife
    @Doggeslife Год назад

    Nice video. Love the view. Go Artemis!
    Sounds like the audio timing is off, as solid booster ignition would have taken place when the clouds started to glow. The horizon is 20 miles away, so at 50 miles the launch pad is far below your horizon and the rocket would have taken several seconds for SLS to become visible even if the horizon wasn't obstructed by trees and homes.
    Vandenberg is 200 miles away south of me, so I never get views like this. 😔

  • @-vedant
    @-vedant Год назад

    Nice 🚀

  • @joiamed8544
    @joiamed8544 Год назад +1

    So it takes 267 seconds for any sound to reach you

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад

      4 minutes, less than 267 seconds

  • @pnac3d
    @pnac3d Год назад

    How are you the only two watching this on the street?

  • @rasataplanta
    @rasataplanta Год назад

    To the moon

  • @jacobl9938
    @jacobl9938 Год назад +1

    Boosters inignition

  • @rjgreen91
    @rjgreen91 Год назад

    Just wait until starship superheavy

  • @Iginihechanska
    @Iginihechanska Год назад

    So few out on the street....

  • @slowneutron6163
    @slowneutron6163 Год назад

    Beauty, eh? \m/

  • @TheOneTrueSpLiT
    @TheOneTrueSpLiT Год назад

    Can you hear anything from 50 miles from the pad?

    • @FloatingGoatee
      @FloatingGoatee  Год назад +4

      Not really. There was a random boom at one point, but I don’t know if that was from the rocket or not. Any supersonic landings from the shuttles though always rattled everything.

    • @stbufraba
      @stbufraba Год назад +2

      The first thing you hear is the sonic boom at 06:14. Considering the ignition timing (0:52), distance and direction of flight, this seems to fit.

    • @powerfulstrong5673
      @powerfulstrong5673 Год назад

      @@FloatingGoatee I just don't know why NASA should choose Apollo style old technologies of space capsules and expendable heavy lift rockets to go back to the moon? A 21st century Apollo style moon landing which used old technologies of space capsules and expendable rockets is very meaningless.

    • @powerfulstrong5673
      @powerfulstrong5673 Год назад

      @@FloatingGoatee SLS rockets and Orion capsules are essentially very old technologies of Apollo era! It's a shame to use Apollo era old technologies to go back beyond LEO in 21st century! I just don't know why NASA doesn't use new technologies such as in-orbit assembly, space tugs, space refueling depots, and plasma or nuclear propulsions!

    • @TheSavageProdigy
      @TheSavageProdigy Год назад

      Simple answer to this: money 💰
      NASA doesn’t have a massive budget, and this rocket was hella expensive already even reusing parts that made it cheaper. Even if they had the budget, this was the best decision to reuse what technology that was already available and works plenty good.

  • @shawnhawkins53
    @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

    at 4:17 it reached its peak and now it is coming down hum sounds about right great footage

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад +3

      It’s moving down relative to the camera. It’s still slightly gaining altitude but it’s getting into orbit.

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      @@BearRealOfficial you know nothing the earth is flat ships do not sail over a curve

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      @@jetpond7904 get wise research flat earth

    • @shawnhawkins53
      @shawnhawkins53 Год назад

      @@BearRealOfficial why make yourself sound stupid it is an infinite plane many suns and moons over it one more thing why can't the globers ever win a debate

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад +3

      @@shawnhawkins53 get wise, study science and physics

  • @ashegheaty
    @ashegheaty Год назад

    Sheet, it almost reached the moon 1 minute into the luanch . Damn .

  • @kloug2006
    @kloug2006 Год назад +1

    Too bad the rocket is not aligned correctly with the Moon and you can clearly see that it doesn't even reach it.

    • @JohnHazenhousen
      @JohnHazenhousen Год назад

      Please tell me you’re joking.

    • @ZXLNT
      @ZXLNT Год назад

      @@JohnHazenhousen Its hard telling because soo many people like him really are that science illiterate...

  • @FlatEarthTruth.
    @FlatEarthTruth. Год назад

    it was soo cool because you could tell that space is fake

  • @FlatEarthTruth.
    @FlatEarthTruth. Год назад +1

    moon hoax

    • @fosstera
      @fosstera Год назад

      Your mom is a hoax

    • @tonk2629
      @tonk2629 Год назад +6

      Care to explain how?

    • @MrFungi69
      @MrFungi69 Год назад

      @@tonk2629 man, come on. this is so obviously cgi, and its even done with low quality stock so its easier to fool people. the creator and myself are having a big laugh at idiots like you with this one, sorry lol. go find your place and get in it, cause its not here, like go get a bag and start putting some trash in it ok? let the brains do the brainy stuff? thanks budddy!

    • @tonk2629
      @tonk2629 Год назад +2

      @@MrFungi69 Yea, his mom is CGI because he doesn’t have one

    • @lmao.3661
      @lmao.3661 Год назад

      @@MrFungi69 "the creator and myself" 😂

  • @FlatEarthTruth.
    @FlatEarthTruth. Год назад +1

    flat

  • @Dieselboy420
    @Dieselboy420 Год назад

    Could you hear anything from that far away?

    • @kerbberbphotography8336
      @kerbberbphotography8336 Год назад

      I was the same distance as he was, I couldn't hear anything.

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 Год назад

      The sound would take 4 minutes to reach, and at that point it would be more quiet