Blastoff! NASA's Artemis 1 moon rocket launches on historic first mission

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  • Опубликовано: 14 ноя 2022
  • NASA Space Launch System rocket launched the Artemis 1 mission on Nov. 16, 2022. The rocket lifted off from Launch Complex 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Full Story: www.space.com/nasa-artemis-1-...
    Credit: NASA
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Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @graemeappleby2352
    @graemeappleby2352 Год назад +404

    Being of a generation that remembers the Apollo missions its fabulous to see NASA going back to the moon.
    Congratulations from me over in England...

    • @colingregson8653
      @colingregson8653 Год назад

      There's nothing there. Apollo was financed to beat the Russians during the Cold War for prestige. Watched a documentary on Detriot and it's decline. What a shithole America is !!.

    • @AnthraciteHorrorStories
      @AnthraciteHorrorStories Год назад +5

      👍

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar Год назад +6

      "...its fabulous to see NASA going back to the moon..." Why? 50 years later?

    • @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent
      @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent Год назад +38

      @@MrShobar Why not? Have some damn optimism.

    • @user-xq4xg7pi4w
      @user-xq4xg7pi4w Год назад +5

      Не были американцы на луне

  • @kennethmiller813
    @kennethmiller813 Год назад +1307

    I remember watching the Apollo launches when I was a kid. This launch watching it brought tears to eyes. I pray Artemis 1 is a complete success. 🇺🇸🚀👍

    • @1247.cccccc
      @1247.cccccc Год назад +55

      It has successfully burned many dollars.

    • @QTpiemcpinky
      @QTpiemcpinky Год назад

      @@RalphGranata Well said, Peace & Love, friend! (⁠ ⁠◜⁠‿⁠◝⁠ ⁠)⁠♡

    • @harkodesign3782
      @harkodesign3782 Год назад +37

      unbelievable i cried too today with the launch of artemis i was really excited

    • @gypsyman1939
      @gypsyman1939 Год назад +29

      Don’t be a baby. We need 💪🏼 men in America. We will not benefit from these launches at all. This is just for the super rich don’t be fooled sir. With all due respect.

    • @lewdogg2247
      @lewdogg2247 Год назад +5

      Cheers Jesus

  • @Timeward76
    @Timeward76 Год назад +212

    As someone who was born far too late to watch the Saturn V launches myself, I am incredibly excited at the chance of being able to see man step on the moon again. This time to stay on our rocky friend

    • @MrHalvnir
      @MrHalvnir Год назад

      As a person who's father worked for Boeing, I've been drawing Mercury/Redstone/Atlass launches, Gemini/Titan II, Apollo, Skylab, Soyes/ Apollo link up/ I.S.S. (i,e, "THE RED STAR" (BECAUSE NASA DIDN'T HAVE A WAY TO GET U.S. up there. N.A.S.A. paid for the Ukraine war by sending American Cosmonauts up into space for 14 years. THEY ABOANDONED THE U.S. to what political plan God only knows. THEY HAVE LOST MY TRUST & RESPECT. LONG LIVE ELON MUSK, & MAY HE BEAT THE PANTS OFF OF THEM.

    • @daviddave7392
      @daviddave7392 Год назад +6

      I remember where I was when Apollo 11 was about to launch; I was in junior high school and scared stiff that something would go wrong and how it would affect me; I could barely watch it. You'll note after watching the SV launches that it initially rises slowly, whereas the Artemis, using technology from the Space Shuttle, takes off like a jackrabbit. There are videos here about Wernher von Braun, the German rocket scientist, how the United States came to acquire him, and many technical descriptions of the SV, which was not a flawless rocket, but its main stage was a work of brute-force engineering and had got men into space, however Apollo 13 had defective wiring in the Service Module, of which a movie and numerous articles and books have been written.

    • @randybaumery5090
      @randybaumery5090 Год назад

      It was a great time!

    • @Viaxity
      @Viaxity Год назад +1

      My grandpa watched Apollo 11 on tv and now he helped build Artemis 1 and took me to watch it my grandpa watched humans step on the moon for the first time (also met ppl who walked on it) and now i watched us get back to the moon its crazy

    • @Cobalt3351
      @Cobalt3351 Год назад

      Man hasn't even stepped on the moon again

  • @badkittynomilktonight3334
    @badkittynomilktonight3334 Год назад +83

    Watching Artemis last night I was shocked by the difference of 50 years. Saturn ignited, lifted slow then gained speed. Artemis LEAPED of the pad like a bat out of hell! I was seriously shocked how fast those SRBs kicked that mule into the air.

    • @vicroc4
      @vicroc4 Год назад +18

      Shuttle also had that habit of getting going in a hurry, and SLS has more in common with that than the Saturn V.

    • @user-so4re9le7k
      @user-so4re9le7k Год назад +5

      Bob Crippen has been quoted saying that the SRB's igniting up felt like a carrier cat shot. The shuttle stack was already going over 100 mph after clearing the tower.
      The later revisions of the shuttle SRB's were rated at around 3,300,000 lbs of thrust EACH (the Saturn V's F1's generated 1.5 million lbs each). This means the shuttle stack generated slightly more thrust than the Saturn V at launch. With the shuttle stack weighing 4.4 million lbs at liftoff and the Saturn V weighing 6.5 million, it's easy to see why the shuttle got going in a big hurry (in comparison).
      Another fun fact: about 58% (well over half) of the shuttle stack's weight at liftoff consisted of the two SRB's... which made them VERY dense suckers!
      Any way you slice it, those SRB's are MONSTERS.

    • @SilentSaturn
      @SilentSaturn Год назад +3

      I went back and watched the old footage of Apollo 17 launching and you are absolutely right. Saturn practically lumbered its way up past the launch tower then slowly gained speed while Artemis just felt so sleek and nimble. Absolutely wild how much progress we’ve made in launch technology over the past 50 years

    • @al3xb0t2
      @al3xb0t2 8 месяцев назад

      yeah the sls legit was made from retired shuttle parts i think@@vicroc4

    • @nishyanthkumar
      @nishyanthkumar 6 месяцев назад +1

      I am aware I am replying to an old comment, but I'd imagine this is because the SLS has/had Solid Rocket Boosters, something the Saturn V lacked.
      ...the 2nd reply details the exact same thing.

  • @johnnie135
    @johnnie135 Год назад +999

    I was at NASA last night to watch her fly (my second attempt) and Artemis gave us a spectacular launch. I just couldn't believe how fast it accelerated and how bright the plumes were from the engine nozzles. Artemis was bright as the Sun which made it difficult to see as it got further and further because my eyes couldn't adjust fast enough from having over cooked retinas. The crackling engines just sounded mean and angry -- which just added more sensory overload to my already overloaded senses. It was just that awesome!

    • @shalakapatil
      @shalakapatil Год назад +30

      Ohh I envy you!!

    • @wasidanatsali6374
      @wasidanatsali6374 Год назад +33

      My dad use to take me to see space shuttle launches. I have fond memories of sitting on his shoulders and the rockets warming my face. The launches were spectacular to witness. Dad would get as excited as anyone there on liftoff. 🚀

    • @EdWeibe
      @EdWeibe Год назад +14

      awesome description.

    • @johnnie135
      @johnnie135 Год назад +16

      @@wasidanatsali6374 That's really a cool memory to share with us, thank-you.

    • @secretagent86
      @secretagent86 Год назад +2

      Any reuse of parts?

  • @OmnoWombo
    @OmnoWombo Год назад +56

    Historic. I love the enthusiasm in the announcer's voice during launch! I can watch that over and over again.

    • @tamalodg196
      @tamalodg196 Год назад +3

      Whats funny is the lady announcer that comes on after the laugh must not even know the spacecraft that much she's say 5 Core Engines (but there's only 4). LOL

    • @nolancain8792
      @nolancain8792 Год назад +2

      @@tamalodg196 it clipped in at the end of her saying RS-25 engines.

  • @Ignisan_66
    @Ignisan_66 Год назад +49

    I was completely unaware that Artemis 1 already launched, completed the mission and returned safely to Earth. WTF RUclips why ain't you recommending videos like these? I don't watch or read regular news channels and sites so RUclips recommendations are pretty much my only souce of news.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself Год назад +4

      You could, you know, subscribe to one of many space news channels.

    • @motorsportfan1246
      @motorsportfan1246 Год назад +3

      On god brother. Barely even heard about it on the news. Seems like educational/inspirational media is pushed to the side in favour of brainless and repetitive content.

    • @GoGoPooerRangers
      @GoGoPooerRangers 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@motorsportfan1246what news are you guys watching? They reported on it, you can literally look it up now. Smh. Don't blame your laziness on the news.

  • @dpeterson157
    @dpeterson157 Год назад +197

    Even on TV, it sounded so loud, being there in person must have been overwhelming! Congratulations to the Artemis crew. It's an amazing accomplishment.

    • @scottwilliams5642
      @scottwilliams5642 Год назад +3

      There is no crew.

    • @Mehlogical
      @Mehlogical Год назад +24

      @@scottwilliams5642 I think he meant the people who worked on the mission, the ones making this possible. Didn't necessarily mean an on board crew.

    • @christfollower2504
      @christfollower2504 Год назад

      @@scottwilliams5642 if there’s I crew, there’s no moon landing -but congratulate them anyhow for spending so much money on a vanity project 🤝🤝

    • @ripnob
      @ripnob Год назад +6

      @@christfollower2504 Hello fellow christian.
      Just to remind you the people who you try to ridicule are the same people that love Jesus.
      Happy holidays.

    • @rodneyjhackenflash4865
      @rodneyjhackenflash4865 Год назад

      Turn the volume down then.

  • @lonefather
    @lonefather Год назад +21

    Congratulations from Hong Kong for successful launch of Artemis. Watched the Apollo 11 mission via TV in 1969. Well done NASA.

    • @teenytinytoons
      @teenytinytoons Год назад +7

      So cool to see all the comments of people who have seen the Apollo mission as a kid. I’m a millennial so this is a first!

  • @BroAnarchy
    @BroAnarchy Год назад +241

    I love how even the guy doing the count down sounds like this is greatest thing moment in his entire life.... Awesome!!!!!!

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Год назад +18

      Nearly 2 decades in the making, thats why.

    • @BroAnarchy
      @BroAnarchy Год назад +6

      @@liammeech3702 Hell yeah, we've waited long enough!!

    • @roncyrebello6407
      @roncyrebello6407 Год назад +4

      @@BroAnarchy terribly long enough thats why were so emotionally attached to the program

    • @williamneal7210
      @williamneal7210 Год назад +17

      I'm the IPT Lead for the Artemis/Gateway power system development for NG--we were all holding our breath during the countdown and it's to the moderator's credit he could even talk at all! I was so giddy I could barely think straight!
      Well done folks! 🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
      GO ARTEMIS! GO GATEWAY! GO LUNAR COLONY 1!!!

    • @neil1030
      @neil1030 Год назад +10

      I guess he got overwhelmed and said "boosters injinin" or something instead of ignition. But I don't blame him for being excited.

  • @davef3080
    @davef3080 Год назад +23

    I used to watch all the launches with my now late father, Tony Flynn. He had his name onboard Artemis via a nasa boarding pass for this launch. Hope you enjoyed the ride, Dad x

  • @donwithrow8168
    @donwithrow8168 Год назад +37

    Congratulations to all who worked hard on this launch. America really needed this. I have been a NASA follower for decades. Prayers for this Noble Venture! Godspeed!

  • @mcfokkinw
    @mcfokkinw Год назад +265

    We rise together, to the moon and beyond.. man this gave me goosebumps

    • @ecurb10
      @ecurb10 Год назад +4

      Tonight by chance I happen to hear that beautiful poignant theme from First Man randomly play on Spotify...watching this brings a lump to the throat.

    • @spaceflight1019
      @spaceflight1019 Год назад +2

      Think of how different things would have been if NASA had launched STS-133 with a defective fuel tank and lost its second crew and orbiter in eight years...

    • @ecurb10
      @ecurb10 Год назад +10

      @@spaceflight1019 Not sure what your point is.

    • @spaceflight1019
      @spaceflight1019 Год назад

      @@ecurb10 Think "Quantum Leap".

    • @scottsmith7051
      @scottsmith7051 Год назад +2

      Am I having deja vu or? Something about the 60's and a guy named Armstrong?

  • @smokingfresh8727
    @smokingfresh8727 Год назад +94

    The sound is insane. Literal chills

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 2 месяца назад

      You should have heard the Saturn 5.

  • @randallberry1708
    @randallberry1708 Год назад +28

    I'm so happy that Artemis 1 launched. Tears are running down my cheeks. I was fourteen when Apollo 11 launched.

    • @brandondebruyn8073
      @brandondebruyn8073 Год назад

      Lol it’s fake 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣nothing went to space 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @zyzzbrah154
      @zyzzbrah154 Год назад

      @@brandondebruyn8073 source: trust me bro

    • @FloridaBoyOnYoutube
      @FloridaBoyOnYoutube Год назад

      @@brandondebruyn8073 You were born after apollo eleven even launched. How tf would you know know anything?

    • @randallberry1708
      @randallberry1708 Год назад

      @@brandondebruyn8073 It is not fake. You must be.a Trump cultist member. You can't believe in reality.

    • @brandondebruyn8073
      @brandondebruyn8073 Год назад

      @@FloridaBoyOnRUclips you really think that rocket is on its way to the moon ? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣it hit the firmament. Nothing is gng to the moon you fool!!!!!!! Ooo wait maybe they gng to fetch the USA flag off the moon 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @boblittle2529
    @boblittle2529 Год назад +10

    I am old enough to remember John Glenn's lift off in 1962 and was glued to the TV for every Gemini, Apollo, and shuttle launch. As I watch this video I can't help but hold my breath, remembering the Challenger tragedy.

    • @famalourian2463
      @famalourian2463 Год назад +2

      At least this one was uncrewed. Just some hardware. Would still be a big bummer, though.

    • @bondgabebond4907
      @bondgabebond4907 Год назад +1

      I'm far more excited about SpaceX and their achievements while NASA and Artimus entered cost overruns and delays. Being born in 1949, I was very aware of the incredible achievements made trying and finally succeeding to get a rocket into space, followed by astronauts. Then we went to the moon and that was exciting. Loved the Space Shuttle flights, the Hubbel Telescope, etc. SpaceX is another wonder, doing great things others could not do. Now we get excited getting Artimus launched into space, FINALLY? NASA will never catch up with SpaceX. It might as well be a public relations agency.

    • @Isosyth
      @Isosyth Год назад +1

      @@bondgabebond4907 I genuinely don't get it, how is NASA "catching up" with SpaceX? NASA's rocket is on the way to the moon right now, SpaceX's is in parts strewn across various craters in the desert while the owner drops $44 billion on Twitter.

    • @bondgabebond4907
      @bondgabebond4907 Год назад

      @@Isosyth Oh, please. Sending a capsule to the moon is old stuff. What I am saying is that it took NASA decades, cost overruns, delays, etc. just to get this rocket off the ground. Werner von Braun in the 1960s did this with great fanfare. Today, I am ashamed that these NASA twits took so long to do it right. Look at the history of the Artimus and it is a sad story. Elon's rockets could have easily done that but it is busy launching almost daily while it took years for NASA to get "one" rocket off. I was there when we sent our first man into orbit and men to the moon. This is small stuff.

    • @Jeremy9697
      @Jeremy9697 Год назад

      @@bondgabebond4907 that's apples to oranges. Nasa and space x are completely different. Nasa has a huge budget limitation where as space x doesn't really. Plus space x is a contractor, not a space agency.

  • @spectae8341
    @spectae8341 Год назад +524

    Wow, can’t believe I was not aware of this spectacular launch until now

    • @keithb6817
      @keithb6817 Год назад +11

      Same.

    • @funny-animations
      @funny-animations Год назад +5

      it happened a few hours ago

    • @kevinlordross
      @kevinlordross Год назад +20

      It was suppose to happen in August this is their 5th attempt to launch it

    • @FrankyPi
      @FrankyPi Год назад +9

      @@kevinlordross 3rd

    • @ecurb10
      @ecurb10 Год назад +5

      Yea me too! I knew it was on the pad but didn't get a chance to check when it was to launch, so clean forgot about it!

  • @berniescakes6076
    @berniescakes6076 Год назад +102

    Since man first looked into the sky they have said “i want to go to that.” I can’t help but to get emotional thinking about how lucky we are to actully witness it. Thousands of generations of our families, we’re the ones who get to see it. We’re F’n doing it!

  • @Dstew57A
    @Dstew57A Год назад +89

    Just imagine what the first Apollo astronauts were thinking and feeling when they first lifted off… absolutely mind blowing..the courage, skill….willingness to possibly die from the unknown.

    • @Breas1014
      @Breas1014 Год назад +6

      They were thinking how can we keep lying to the world for 53 years

    • @scottwilliams5642
      @scottwilliams5642 Год назад +3

      Um,,, there is no crew thinking. There is no crew on this mission.

    • @jlopez9382
      @jlopez9382 Год назад

      I know I’d be terrified

    • @Dstew57A
      @Dstew57A Год назад +16

      @@Breas1014 idiocy abounds

    • @Gilvids
      @Gilvids Год назад

      You cant disprove his statement.

  • @RobertNielsen1970
    @RobertNielsen1970 Год назад +11

    I watched this three weeks ago and was reminded of something that one of the commentators said during the launch of an early shuttle mission (I can't remember which one, and edited the comment to reflect this flight):
    "With no waiting at all, the SLS _kicks, and GOES!_ No slow, majestic climb like the old Apollo--Artemis 1 _leaped_ from the pad like a _scared cat!"_

  • @eternalfarewell2646
    @eternalfarewell2646 Год назад +263

    I have been following the Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft since I was in High School. Congratulations to all the scientists, engineers, and technicians at NASA that made this mission possible. I have been waiting for years to see this rocket, its RS-25 engines, and twin Solid Rocket Boosters to launch into the sky and to the Moon! Good luck for the rest of the mission and I cannot wait to see Orion come home successfully!

    • @christhorne116
      @christhorne116 Год назад +8

      Same! And I finished high school in 1988!

    • @peterhankel-shepherd6110
      @peterhankel-shepherd6110 Год назад +13

      Beginning with the launch of Alan Shepard, I have not missed a single launch of Astronauts or tests of their vehicles! This is a momentous occasion and I wish the mission great success so that we can finally land a person on the moon again!

    • @copsarepigs8269
      @copsarepigs8269 Год назад +5

      This is amazing. Were finally going back!

    • @Saifullah.Q
      @Saifullah.Q Год назад +1

      Evidence of your statement?

    • @yantimarliya178
      @yantimarliya178 Год назад +2

      I watched the first Orion test flight aboard the Delta IV heavy when I was in high school. Now it has been 2 years since my college graduation.

  • @rnkim2564
    @rnkim2564 Год назад +132

    I saw the first ones to the moon too. wow, time flies

    • @l214laus
      @l214laus Год назад +15

      I was let out of school to watch it at home. Black and white TV back then for us.

    • @BroAnarchy
      @BroAnarchy Год назад +10

      Dude, that was like literally over Half a Century ago.... Crazy

    • @jodicobb6382
      @jodicobb6382 Год назад +5

      Time; 41 family members have passed since the last (time) there.

    • @christinehartley4634
      @christinehartley4634 Год назад +10

      I watched in school and we had a tv on very long legs . It has stayed with me ever since . I am a spacemainiac !!!

    • @petesmith6434
      @petesmith6434 Год назад +11

      How true! Many of us that were teenagers during the first moon shots are now retired and watching these flights with our grandkids.

  • @jmshansford3
    @jmshansford3 Год назад +8

    I am also a member of the Apollo generation and this has been a very long time coming for me. Watching a Saturn V launch even on TV was a truly amazing experience. 50 years later I watched this launch on a tablet! And absolutely nothing could have prepared me for what I experienced when they lit this lady. I have never seen - or heard - such mind-boggling power. And as for what I felt the moment that rocket left the launchpad? Pure, euphoric joy!

  • @jafranlatheef
    @jafranlatheef Год назад +7

    The Result of Hardwork.✌️Greetings from India 🇮🇳🇺🇸. I’m working in ISRO. I’m so Excited to See Her lift off. Before I’m very worry about changed the launch date due to some Technical problem. But today I’m very Happy. Again congrats Artemis team and NASA.You’re did a Great Job.👍

    • @piepiedog1
      @piepiedog1 4 дня назад

      Hello from the US! On the flip side, I work with JPL and I'm excited for the NISAR launch and to start getting data back from that mission. To me, India has the most impressive space program today, constantly soaring past very difficult milestones -- and I expect the collaboration with NASA will only strengthen in the future.

  • @MGSSAB
    @MGSSAB Год назад +42

    Watched her fly last night from the Cape. What an absolutely amazing experience. How bright SLS was!! To the Moon!!!

    • @jnelnormeda4292
      @jnelnormeda4292 Год назад

      Which way?

    • @christfollower2504
      @christfollower2504 Год назад

      @@jnelnormeda4292 up, towards the Van Allen radiation belt

    • @robertr.2076
      @robertr.2076 Год назад

      would you say it was brighter than any other launch? I'm hearing ppl say that.

    • @mikeburney9282
      @mikeburney9282 Год назад

      @@robertr.2076
      Yes

    • @christfollower2504
      @christfollower2504 Год назад

      @@robertr.2076 the answer depends on if you’ve watched every other launch before ....

  • @charlesjustice8771
    @charlesjustice8771 Год назад +7

    When NASA was sequestered to a large degree I watched my county die. The lifeblood of my area was evacuated and the local economy suffered greatly. To see NASA back and swinging gave me full body goosebumps. 321 forever

  • @theophilus7422
    @theophilus7422 Год назад +14

    It was worth the wait. My compliments to the NASA engineers that cobbled this thing together and made it work after some necessary fixes. Artemis is a thing of beauty. WOW!

  • @gothgirl4evr881
    @gothgirl4evr881 Год назад +35

    I've lived in Titusville for most of my life and have seen countless launches (rockets and shuttles)and they have become so common here that rarely do I even stop what I'm doing to watch them, however this launch was like nothing I've seen here before. It lit up the sky more than any shuttle launch. It was truly spectacular. It really made me remember how awesome they can be. Glad to say that thank God I live a block away from Indian River and didn't have to drive to see it because there were cars parked everywhere I can only imagine how long it took people to get out of the mess of cars after the launch

    • @donismills2955
      @donismills2955 Год назад +1

      I heard from a friend that took a chance they would actually have a launch, He Said it took him just over 1 hour to get out of the immediate be area due to the immense traffic there.. (he had been to a few of the later shuttle launches)

    • @gothgirl4evr881
      @gothgirl4evr881 Год назад +1

      @@donismills2955 omg I don't doubt that for a second. I live one block off US1 where there are 2 parks on river that everyone goes to watch these and from what I remember I don't think I've ever seen the amount of cars except maybe when John Glenn went back on one of the shuttles. It was quite literally a cluster f**k! The launch was definitely gorgeous. But I'm SO glad that I live in few minute walk of seeing it. I saw people with the orange glow sticks directing traffic when they were arriving but it was a free for all when it came to leaving. You could hardly walk down the sidewalk, there were even people sitting in fold up chairs blocking the entrance and exits of convenience stores.

    • @mendelaskovski3996
      @mendelaskovski3996 Год назад +1

      Those who believe that man landed on the moon, ask them how fast the spacecraft was flying and how they reduced that speed when they landed in a vacuum. Action and reaction?

    • @roberts8574
      @roberts8574 Год назад +1

      @@mendelaskovski3996 Gravity did most of it. Earth gravity reduced the speed from 7 mi per sec to a fraction of that. Then the service module was sufficient for lunar orbit. Action also happens with gravity.

    • @ilike3v3rything83
      @ilike3v3rything83 Год назад +1

      Hi I'm from Ireland....whats the possibility that I can come and crash in your place for the next launch lol

  • @captainkirk4514
    @captainkirk4514 Год назад +29

    Watching this launch takes me back to early days of the Apollo moon missions as I remember watching them on television when I was a kid...it's exciting!

    • @irisbaez1972
      @irisbaez1972 Год назад

      And they lie to you as a kid. You believe them as a Kid. they never touch the moon with humanoids.

    • @baviddowie2963
      @baviddowie2963 Год назад +7

      @@irisbaez1972 does your tinfoil hat scratch your head?

    • @Jayms1178
      @Jayms1178 Год назад

      @@irisbaez1972 Do you weirdos have nothing better to do than spread this nonsense. Like what donyou get out of it spreading lies

  • @MatthewSheehan-zl1qg
    @MatthewSheehan-zl1qg Год назад +22

    so cool, im old enough to remember all the moon landings, im 66 wish i was on that rocket!

  • @cmillerphotos
    @cmillerphotos Год назад +6

    I watched the Apollo missions when I was a kid. I just can't believe it's taken us this long to go back. We should be on Mars and beyond by now.

    • @_MaxHeadroom_
      @_MaxHeadroom_ Год назад

      The bright side to that situation is that we are now much more prepared to successfully do that, especially with technology.

    • @mendelaskovski3996
      @mendelaskovski3996 Год назад

      I STILL NOT BELIEVE.
      Those who believe that man landed on the moon, ask them how fast the spacecraft was flying and how they reduced that speed when they landed in a vacuum. Action and reaction?

    • @cmillerphotos
      @cmillerphotos Год назад

      @@mendelaskovski3996 It's simple. We didn't have the technology needed to fake it in the late 1960s. Seriously. The cinematography and special effects simply did not exist then. But do you know what we DID have? The technology to do it. Not to mention the fact that there's no way the THOUSANDS of people involved in the project, from technicians to engineers to astronauts, would have all gone along with it. Now please go away with your conspiracy bullshit.

  • @spideramazon5032
    @spideramazon5032 Год назад +68

    The speeds the rocket can achieve is phenomenal: 16,000 miles per hour. What a huge speed. A big respect to the U.S. team who made this miracle happen.

    • @famalourian2463
      @famalourian2463 Год назад +4

      It is amazing when you think about it. 22,600 miles per hour or so after tli. Even faster when it comes back. Beautiful launch. It really jumped off the pad faster than I expected once the boosters lit.

    • @czarcastic1458
      @czarcastic1458 Год назад +2

      HAHA Nothing we have can go that fast . You are easily duped.

    • @joag1971
      @joag1971 Год назад +9

      @@czarcastic1458 your italian tho

    • @ryccoh
      @ryccoh Год назад +2

      @@czarcastic1458 czarcasm?

    • @wildliferox2
      @wildliferox2 Год назад +6

      @@famalourian2463 And amazing to think it needs to get to achieve minimum 25,000mph to leave Earth orbit.

  • @Wally-pu2hh
    @Wally-pu2hh Год назад +7

    So it went up , then horizontal , then they show us a CGI cartoon still of what looks like a pilot burner 😆

  • @James.Fife05
    @James.Fife05 Год назад +40

    Well done to the USA and NASA! (from Australia). Great to witness Artemis 1 finally get off that launch pad!

    • @teenytinytoons
      @teenytinytoons Год назад +3

      Was bummed at the first two launches but better safe than sorry. This thing is too expensive and has required too much blood sweat and tears for it to go wrong. Really happy about the successful launch. This baby took off right off the gates.

    • @lemmetellyousomething679
      @lemmetellyousomething679 Год назад +3

      Yeah finally

    • @James.Fife05
      @James.Fife05 Год назад +2

      @@teenytinytoons Agree, better to err on the side of caution, a lot of money and resources tied up in this project.

    • @ferretfriend5458
      @ferretfriend5458 Год назад

      Yes strange that they found it so much easier way back in the sixties, and it was manned and they walked on the surface... 🙄

  • @thebigpicture2032
    @thebigpicture2032 Год назад +30

    That was unbelievably beautiful! Her calm effective voice was a perfect match to those thunderous engines heading back to the moon for the first time in 50 years.

    • @BrianAdams-dt1ks
      @BrianAdams-dt1ks Год назад +2

      PR move from NASA (hiring her to talk). She is just a voice and is not an engineer or scientist of any form. She couldn't explain any of the Artemis details any more than you could.

    • @andriys.1860
      @andriys.1860 Год назад

      @@BrianAdams-dt1ks Maybe you can? Thought not.

    • @BrianAdams-dt1ks
      @BrianAdams-dt1ks Год назад

      @@andriys.1860 LOL, do you think? Do you think this girl was chief systems engineer on the project? LOL. She is just a hired voice, given a little training on how to deliver the spiel, how to pronounce and sound really cool and professional. She talks from script. Don't let the facts butthurt you.

    • @andriys.1860
      @andriys.1860 Год назад

      @@BrianAdams-dt1ks And where is your proof "LOL"? You sound like a 7 year old who has been given a C- in acting class.

  • @fredrikh9299
    @fredrikh9299 9 месяцев назад +5

    "BOOSTERS IGNINICHION" :)... lovely excitment from the commentator.

  • @davidmiller9267
    @davidmiller9267 Год назад +149

    Congratulations to NASA for having the tenacity to pull this off! Beautiful sight.
    My only disappointment was there was no on board camera. Please include (at least) one in the future.

    • @roncyrebello6407
      @roncyrebello6407 Год назад +17

      There are cameras onboard the footage will probably be released later

    • @davidmiller9267
      @davidmiller9267 Год назад +20

      I should have said “no live cameras”. It takes guts to do, but IMO, it’s critical to have (live) cameras to build public and political support.

    • @ngoakodots7961
      @ngoakodots7961 Год назад +4

      this is against the will of the gods, your blasphemy has already cost us

    • @youngurd
      @youngurd Год назад +4

      What are u going to look at an empty capsule? Lol

    • @gordon4ce
      @gordon4ce Год назад +2

      This dude acts like it wouldn't take the contractors 5 years and $15 Billion to add a live camera feed to this bloated, useless thing.

  • @Maderyne
    @Maderyne Год назад +29

    With all the setbacks, all the delays, it's nice to see such a well-planned launch of Artemis 1. My hope is all goes well in the coming days, and the mission proceeds as planned!

    • @ferretfriend5458
      @ferretfriend5458 Год назад

      Strange that they found it so much easier in the late sixties, and actually landed men on the moon. Crazy waste of money

    • @jwilson2793
      @jwilson2793 Год назад +5

      @@ferretfriend5458 nice job copy pasting your reply.

    • @shaeby8123
      @shaeby8123 10 месяцев назад

      @@ferretfriend5458 They didn't find it easy, it took 11 Apollo missions to get there, with the 1st Apollo evaporating their crew.

  • @knarfweasel
    @knarfweasel Год назад +4

    Had to rewatch after the starship launch. Had to remeber what a real rocket lauch looked like

    • @Goofyspacenerd
      @Goofyspacenerd 10 месяцев назад

      Starship ift 2 will be better

  • @SM-cg2dc
    @SM-cg2dc Год назад +4

    I’m glad to see the launch, but you’d think that a 4 billion dollar rocket would have a couple cameras onboard…. I would have loved to see the boosters separate from the core stage…

  • @NicholasAPena
    @NicholasAPena Год назад +17

    I remember watching the last Shuttle launch in 2011, There is something magical about this moment

  • @arthurwagar88
    @arthurwagar88 Год назад +136

    Congrats to all those evolved in this stupendous event.

  • @TheMoonfam5
    @TheMoonfam5 Год назад +3

    My Dad worked on the assembly line at North American Rockwell during the Apollo missions. It was with great pride waking up early to watch the launches of those brave astronauts leave this terrestrial world and go where no man had gone before. I have the 8mm company movies of Apollo 4, 8-11 which I have now digitized. I am so glad we have decided to return to space.

    • @AllAmericanGuyExpert
      @AllAmericanGuyExpert Год назад

      My Dad wrote the lunar landing software ... the software that never got used, thanks to an unrelated system malfunction and Neil Armstrong's use of manual control. I bet he'll always wonder if it would have worked, lol.

  • @MrPottsTeaching
    @MrPottsTeaching Год назад +10

    There's NOTHING like a NASA space launch! Wow that's POWER

  • @PickledShark
    @PickledShark Год назад +14

    Now THAT is a rocket. Holy hell that was bad ass. I believe it even beat the king of rockets, the Saturn V for Thrust at takeoff. 8.8 million lbs of thrust 🤯

    • @scottwilliams5642
      @scottwilliams5642 Год назад

      Saturn 5, 7.6 Million pounds

    • @bradleyblock7540
      @bradleyblock7540 Год назад

      The SLS has almost a million pounds of thrust greater than the Saturn V. Incredible.

    • @terellfelder2759
      @terellfelder2759 Год назад

      That's a hell of a rocket truthfully I think they ain't to far from breaking the fastest on earth light

  • @alexkaplun7460
    @alexkaplun7460 Год назад +242

    We wish NASA full success!
    Way to go!

    • @weirdmatter
      @weirdmatter Год назад

      NASA Never, A, Straight, answer. Don't worry they will fake this "moon landing" most spectacular 😉 they know everything not to do this time with the help of modern day CGI.

    • @kuntachente6273
      @kuntachente6273 Год назад

      We nothing, speak for yourself nigga

    • @Tarheel13
      @Tarheel13 Год назад

      @@weirdmatterone of them. 🤣🤣

    • @dingus622
      @dingus622 Год назад

      The senior SS Nazi officer war criminal would be proud.

  • @mosgamingchannel1754
    @mosgamingchannel1754 Год назад +4

    2:32 "Boosters IgnitiShHsh!" Poor guy got too excited.

  • @LucindaEnglish
    @LucindaEnglish Год назад +5

    I watched every moon launch and shuttle launch. This is amazing! A column of fire.

  • @buckshot4428
    @buckshot4428 Год назад +20

    I moved to Canaveral in 75 and I got to experience a lot of launches. Many were spy satellites launched from Patrick at night. Aborted missions were not that uncommon and I was asked to join the Cape Canaveral Volunteer Fire Dept. I had to decline due to my work schedule. I was a Customs Broker and did a lot of business with Harris and others that supported NASA.

  • @Keepmelevel
    @Keepmelevel Год назад +61

    Artemis jumped off that pad, it really wanted to go! Outstanding! 🎉🤟🏽

    • @JordanCS13
      @JordanCS13 Год назад +13

      Yeah, I was amazed by the acceleration and power. Makes a space shuttle launch look tame in comparison.

    • @tarakrawczyk8780
      @tarakrawczyk8780 Год назад +5

      Yes 🕯️

    • @cad5238
      @cad5238 Год назад +5

      She did ! Didn't she.! Artemis said light my candles and cut me loose boys.I also enjoyed the lady commentator.

    • @NoOne-sn2si
      @NoOne-sn2si Год назад +4

      Yeah, huge contrast to the Apollo lifting off. Apollo is still #1 with me... Archaic technology by today's standards but it got humans to the moon.

  • @jimm8246
    @jimm8246 Год назад +3

    Wow spectacular launch. NASA finally got her to fly. Congratulations to all involved with the return to the Moon project. Nice work! When the solid boosters separated it was reminiscent of the shuttle launches. May your mission be a total success.

  • @alex35agm
    @alex35agm Год назад

    My name is on that rocket as I signed up to have it there months ago.I hope it's a successful mission. I am a 62 year Canadian and remember sitting in my Aunt's house in Maine on July 20th,1969 watching Apollo 11 land on the moon.And I was in Florida in 1983 watching the Space Shuttle Challenger take off.Both events were marvelous and highlights of my life.Great to see humans doing something positive for a change and hope for the future.

  • @firstlast9731
    @firstlast9731 Год назад +12

    I've been watching SLS for over a year and seeing it finally go up is amazing.

  • @alexanderlennington4382
    @alexanderlennington4382 Год назад +82

    This was so incredible to watch last night! Congrats to everyone who worked so hard on launching this rocket!

    • @stevejorfi9086
      @stevejorfi9086 Год назад +1

      They work no harder than anyone else they're not breaking their backs.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +3

      @@stevejorfi9086 Yes, they work harder than you ever could.

    • @ripnob
      @ripnob Год назад

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver Especially without breaking a neck.

    • @ripnob
      @ripnob Год назад

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver Hey wait a minute, why cant NASA, the billion dollar budget company afford to pay hitmen to break these flat earthers necks in order to “hide the truth”

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад

      @@ripnob NASA isn't a company. It's a civilian government agency. Its budget is minuscule and it doesn't care about flattards.

  • @georgegretser2178
    @georgegretser2178 Год назад +6

    Such an incredibly complex machine - a triumph of science, engineering and will

  • @manelperera6100
    @manelperera6100 Год назад +3

    Congrats to all those made this historic event happen, amazing, very emotional.

  • @aspect_of_tiamat905
    @aspect_of_tiamat905 Год назад +15

    2:19 for when the fire starts
    2:30 for when it really gets going
    2:35 for liftoff
    5:21 for science-y diagrams and stuff
    6:24 Switches to a computer generated model of the rocket

    • @fathertime9115
      @fathertime9115 Год назад +1

      You forgot 6:24 for when it switches to a computer generated model of the rocket. Can't be watching where it actually lands of course!

    • @shamaredwards6796
      @shamaredwards6796 Год назад

      Also forgot how it hits the firmament at 3:33

    • @shamaredwards6796
      @shamaredwards6796 Год назад

      Very clear how the light reflects off the firmament

    • @jonneh8317
      @jonneh8317 Год назад

      @@shamaredwards6796 that isn't a reflection.

    • @robertlang4292
      @robertlang4292 Год назад +2

      And just think, you just out-thunk NASA, who failed to provide any time reference.

  • @scottjustscott3730
    @scottjustscott3730 Год назад +8

    Pretty awesome. Not too thrilled about throwing away four SSMEs. They're still technological marvels and they're over forty years old. Great to see them fly

  • @zalcstera
    @zalcstera Год назад +2

    I was up-late watching the livestream on my phone, stuff is spectacular. Didn't know NASA was doing more missions like this

  • @jamesm6576
    @jamesm6576 Год назад

    Been following Artemis and I dozed off before launch. Thanks for this recap. Congratulations on mission 1 launch!

  • @russellhoward149
    @russellhoward149 Год назад +6

    Brings back memories from the 1960's. So glad to see us going back to the moon. The last time man was on the moon was 50 years ago this month.

    • @mendelaskovski3996
      @mendelaskovski3996 Год назад

      Those who believe that man landed on the moon, ask them how fast the spacecraft was flying and how they reduced that speed when they landed in a vacuum. Action and reaction?

  • @jerrylee8261
    @jerrylee8261 Год назад +72

    A beautiful and historic moment for our country and its space exploration. A flawless launch. Hope Artemis has same safe record as the Saturn5.

    • @DOCTOMandTHEBANDITS
      @DOCTOMandTHEBANDITS Год назад +3

      After Starship launch, the record goes to SpaceX!

    • @byronmolinajordan5777
      @byronmolinajordan5777 Год назад +1

      Congratulations

    • @lilydarkmoore8769
      @lilydarkmoore8769 Год назад

      @@DOCTOMandTHEBANDITS The difference is that NASA is owned by the People, and the development of Space Technology by NASA does not come with some single billionaire's opportunity to blackmail the American Public if there is some reason that we NEED this technology. For instance, let's use a hypothetical situation: there is a comet that will fly too close to the earth and possibly hit us. (I'm just making up a situation so don't panic!) Do you REALLY want one of the incredibly selfish billionaires with delusions of grandeur to be able to blackmail the American People into making him King if he uses his tech to go and deal with it? Or to pledging to use ONLY his businesses for all government contracts in the future, no matter the cost? Elon Musk already tried to blackmail the US government once, regarding providing internet service to Ukraine, which would have destroyed their ability to fight the war against Russia! Do you truly think that any of the billionaires that have space flight capability would be able to resist getting a HUGE pay-out from such a "service" to the earth? And I mean a HUGE pay-out; not just a reasonable one. They are all sociopaths with delusions of grandeur, which is how they got to be billionaires in the first place, because it comes with the misuse of regular people for one's own profit. This country does not need a king, nor does the earth need an emperor.
      This country is one of the few that can afford to have a publicly owned space program, so we owe it the future to do so. Our former space program developed so much new technology that it transformed our world! What wonders could the new space program bring?

    • @WimsicleStranger
      @WimsicleStranger Год назад

      @@DOCTOMandTHEBANDITS Nobody give a f about SpaceX. You can speak when they've done something meaningful.

    • @ThreeTreeDog
      @ThreeTreeDog Год назад

      Waste of resources
      Nice engines to bad they are ocean scrap now

  • @DonSpidaliere
    @DonSpidaliere Год назад +6

    I watched most of the Saturn V launches when I was a child. Wish I could have seen this launch. Looked spectacular. My father always talked about the rumble, which I don't recall, but he was at the Cape working in launch control, so he was pretty close.

    • @mikeburney9282
      @mikeburney9282 Год назад

      It lit up the whole Central Florida sky and could be seen from Grand Bahama Island..

    • @matthewbet97
      @matthewbet97 Год назад

      I was at Kennedy when this took off and the rumble is no joke. You feel every pop like it’s right next to you. Crazy feeling

  • @ImageRedacted
    @ImageRedacted Год назад +5

    Props to the cameraman who learned to fly to get those aerial shots.

    • @window5417
      @window5417 Год назад

      It was probably a drone but I agree

    • @wutguycreations
      @wutguycreations Год назад +1

      ​@Window you didn't know? Cameramen are so powerful they can fly on their own. No need for planes or drones. As soon as you become a cameraman you gain the ability to levitate

  • @Dziricani
    @Dziricani Год назад +14

    Let's put some things in perspective here:
    Towards the end of the video, the vehicle was traveling at a whopping 16000 mph.
    The distance between New York and Los Angeles (in a straight line) is 2446.3 miles.
    So it would only take this rocket 9.17 minutes to travel across the length of the US!
    Some added perspective:
    A quick search shows that the fastest commercial rifle cartridge in the world is the .220 Swift (developed by Winchester). Its highest recorded velocity is 3180.7 mph.
    So when this rocket reached 16000 mph, it was moving 5 times faster than the fastest bullet!

    • @odynith9356
      @odynith9356 Год назад +2

      Yes escape velocity of earths atmospheres is around 17000 mph

    • @teenytinytoons
      @teenytinytoons Год назад +4

      I didn’t know I needed this comparison but I’m here for it. Thank you!

    • @davidaustin6962
      @davidaustin6962 Год назад

      Note to self... Invent rocket powered bullets

    • @2199SPUDMAN
      @2199SPUDMAN Год назад

      @@odynith9356 Actually, it's closer to 25,000 mph -- about 7 miles/sec (11.2 km/sec). And you're not escaping earth's atmosphere per se, you're "escaping" Earth's gravity well.

    • @JB-ef7ks
      @JB-ef7ks Год назад +2

      Right so do the math on how far away they said it was at that speed and how long it took and it doesn't add up!! I smell bull!!!

  • @acjunior72
    @acjunior72 Год назад +36

    Goosebumps! Congrats @NASA, ... and on my 50th Birthday, hell of a treat. :)

    • @lifabekwa7745
      @lifabekwa7745 Год назад +4

      Happy birthday 🥳🎉

    • @stevengoodman3498
      @stevengoodman3498 Год назад +3

      Happy Birthday!!! I just turned 61. Age is but a number, it's how you feel inside that's important. This made me feel like a kid again! What a rush.....

    • @cynthiaj.wagner1807
      @cynthiaj.wagner1807 Год назад +1

      Happy birthday! Mine is Friday 😁

  • @OcotilloTom
    @OcotilloTom Год назад +4

    I'm almost 77 years old and have been following our space program since I was in the 5th grade. I remember when Sputnik was launched and how it took us all by surprise. I also remember the selection of the first Mercury astronauts, Alan Sheppard's fight, John Glenn's flight etc.,etc.. Seems like yesterday.

    • @mendelaskovski3996
      @mendelaskovski3996 Год назад

      And you never get the point all this years.
      Those who believe that man landed on the moon, ask them how fast the spacecraft was flying and how they reduced that speed when they landed in a vacuum. Action and reaction?

    • @oppalus
      @oppalus Год назад

      @@mendelaskovski3996 I’m pretty sure google could answer that, unless you want a completely random man on the street instead of google

    • @DakotaTheIronSpider
      @DakotaTheIronSpider Год назад

      @@mendelaskovski3996 mf, if you throw a ball at another ball in space the ball you threw is gonna hit the other ball, and the other ball go flying. Newtons laws are still present in vacuums lmao

    • @carcinogen60yearsago
      @carcinogen60yearsago 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@mendelaskovski3996
      It's called a rocket engine.

  • @onlyweknow2
    @onlyweknow2 Год назад +7

    Maybe it's just me but I'm amazing how FAST it came off the pad! Fricking Amazing.

    • @vicroc4
      @vicroc4 Год назад

      She's fast for such a big girl. Gets it from her mama, the Shuttle.

    • @ZXLNT
      @ZXLNT Год назад

      8.5 million pounds of thrust

  • @nickhowatson4745
    @nickhowatson4745 Год назад +46

    It was incredible watching it all happen on Tim Dodd's aka Everyday Astronaut's stream. they got some incredible 8k 120fps zoomed in tracking footage of the rocket throughout its ascent.

    • @ItsKells
      @ItsKells Год назад +3

      Will go have a look! Thanks for sharing

    • @personguy1004
      @personguy1004 Год назад +2

      @@heidiscott9226 what are you saying

    • @nickhowatson4745
      @nickhowatson4745 Год назад +2

      @@personguy1004 i think hes having a stroke or something.

  • @jamescameron5520
    @jamescameron5520 Год назад +5

    This is so cool I have personally seen a night launch of the shuttle and I'm going to try and see the next launch live

  • @frednugent2310
    @frednugent2310 Год назад +4

    That is one hell of a fire trail. A beast of a rocket

  • @user-tt3xu2hf5b
    @user-tt3xu2hf5b Год назад +2

    Stayed up last night t watch it. Live about 100 miles away but have a perfect view to see it go up. The speed and brightness was anything I've ever seen before. when I saw it for the first time it looks like the sun was rising no joke. Just insane how powerful that rocket is.

  • @Darsh0606
    @Darsh0606 Год назад +3

    I've been waiting for this singular launch to happen for months and when I stopped caring about it for a few days it launches, I wanted to see it live for months!

  • @user-zv5yn5bz3g
    @user-zv5yn5bz3g Год назад +87

    A new historic achievement for NASA

    • @mkruge9076
      @mkruge9076 Год назад +2

      A new historic lie. Why do we greet each other with what's up? Those whonsay not much think there's no ceiling. The reason we say what's up is because if you know the truth of earth, the sky is blue because it the upper ocean from the beginning. Genesis 1:6-9

    • @halcyon.x
      @halcyon.x Год назад +2

      @Mkruge 907 thanks for ruining the moment

    • @fathertime9115
      @fathertime9115 Год назад

      There is nothing new or historic about pretending to go to the moon again.

    • @velociraptorblue866
      @velociraptorblue866 Год назад +2

      @@mkruge9076 cringe flat earther

    • @ripnob
      @ripnob Год назад

      @@mkruge9076 Genesis 16:9 tells us to submit to god, not to NASA, while, me being a christian, is dumfounded about how many people are using the bible as a literal excuse on how someone with 100,000,000 does not have enough money to pay one hitman to break your spine.

  • @Wolf_Dominic
    @Wolf_Dominic Год назад +6

    It’s very exciting honestly that we’re finally going back after all these years.

  • @DetriotSteel
    @DetriotSteel Год назад +1

    2:32 Boosters what...?!
    The guy's excitement overwhelmed him for a moment there😄

  • @shoemakerleve9
    @shoemakerleve9 Год назад +116

    Terrific! What a time to be alive!

    • @sl4983
      @sl4983 Год назад +10

      They did it in the 60s too

    • @KISERBROUGH
      @KISERBROUGH Год назад +4

      Lol. More flouride

    • @nextlevelenglish5858
      @nextlevelenglish5858 Год назад +3

      This was already done decades ago. It will be a great time when people can actually travel to these places, such as the moon and Mars.

    • @megawave79
      @megawave79 Год назад +11

      @@sl4983 of course, but now we have better technology and can get better images of the moon and what not.

    • @roncyrebello6407
      @roncyrebello6407 Год назад +1

      Exactly

  • @fidelrodriguezgarcia2417
    @fidelrodriguezgarcia2417 Год назад +32

    a perfect launch, a great day and the beginning of a new era in space exploration. Good job and congratulations

  • @navneetkumarbhaskar618
    @navneetkumarbhaskar618 Год назад +2

    *_Huge insane rocket 🚀, best of luck _**_#NASA_**_.. Hope _**_#ISRO_**_ will built such huge rocket in near future.. Greeting from India 🇮🇳_*

  • @deezy9595
    @deezy9595 Год назад +4

    From the time the boosters ignite and then the sound that just rumbles off my speakers. Goosebumps

  • @mhughes1160
    @mhughes1160 Год назад +3

    You know the first reporter wanted to say to. “ infinity and beyond “ . LoL 😂

  • @ENDTIME_GENERATION
    @ENDTIME_GENERATION Год назад +4

    Poor cameraman they left on the moon years ago,there finally going to go back and get him.

    • @SaraHouck
      @SaraHouck Год назад +1

      The one who secretly arrived to film the landing? 🙄

    • @ENDTIME_GENERATION
      @ENDTIME_GENERATION Год назад

      @@SaraHouck
      Yeah that guy

  • @Deeps__
    @Deeps__ Год назад +1

    So glad we were in Florida for the launch. We were at the 3rd best site for viewing, the whole place lit up like a sunset.

  • @speedy423
    @speedy423 Год назад +3

    At my early years of life there was Apollo. At the opposite end here's Artemis. Remarkably the same level of excitement..

  • @josch614
    @josch614 Год назад +3

    Go Artemis!
    However if there is no telemetry and no cams in 2022 I at last want Walter Cronkite for commentary!

  • @rampar77
    @rampar77 Год назад +11

    It was spectacular. It bought tears to my eye seeing it successfully launched. I worked on Space Shuttle and then the SLS.

  • @SingingPostman27
    @SingingPostman27 Год назад +8

    Congratulations, beloved NASA, on a successful launch. Thank you so very much.

  • @tperk
    @tperk Год назад +2

    2:35 I suppose the launch control announcer was mandated to give his little "we rise together" speech by NASA public relations. Just a simple "liftoff...tower cleared" like in the old days will suffice, thank you very much.

    • @vicroc4
      @vicroc4 Год назад +1

      Unfortunately, that became a tradition during the Shuttle era. Listen to the PRO narrator from almost any Shuttle launch and you'll hear the same kind of thing. ULA does it, too.

  • @SteverRob
    @SteverRob Год назад +10

    I was part of the Team of Thousands who helped build it. So happy to see it fly!

    • @SteverRob
      @SteverRob Год назад

      @Mark Asread yeah

    • @SteverRob
      @SteverRob Год назад

      @@redherring6921Were you there at KSC during the launch? No, you weren’t

  • @atlantis0v-104
    @atlantis0v-104 Год назад +5

    I'm very happy that SLS Successfully launched

  • @richh650
    @richh650 Год назад +1

    Looking back at the Artemis liftoff in late April 2023, what an extremely impressive liftoff and mission. Well Done!

  • @roberte.bennett8327
    @roberte.bennett8327 Год назад +1

    We stood on the bow of our cruise ship (Mariner of the Seas) after boarding in Port Canaveral on September 3rd looking over at Artemis 1 sitting on the launch pad ready to go. We had a front row seat for the 3 o'clock lift-off. It was scrubbed. 2 1/2 months later, it goes.

  • @evilangel8194
    @evilangel8194 Год назад +75

    This never gets old no matter how times I see it I love to see a launch in person be Alot better then watching on screen, I think it's even better watching a night launch , hopefully they will be sending people back to the moon soon, just amazing every launch I watch is like the first one I've seen love watching those engine light my favorite part , I'd like to thank the people for making it possible for everyone to have the chance to watch this spectacular sight , I would love to get the opportunity to ride along to space , 12000 mph that's faster than a bullet travel the ultimate drag raceer

    • @TxInfinity
      @TxInfinity Год назад +5

      According to the live stream Artemis 2 is supposed to be carrying the first woman and first person of color to set foot on the moon. It's a massive leap for humanity!

    • @captainpobtamere3024
      @captainpobtamere3024 Год назад +3

      welll,,, those rocket engine are actuallygetting VERY old,,, i think north korea is more advanced engine technologie... that is ridiculous

    • @jman7638
      @jman7638 Год назад

      @@captainpobtamere3024 North Korea is complete dogsh!t. Kim Jong Un can suck my b@lls then go f$ck his b!tch of a sister.
      North Korea is using the most outdated garbage in the world. They are weak. You guys keep blowing missiles over Japan and into the Pacific and you’ll find out just how advanced US technology is….and just how outdated your technology is.😂😂🤣🤣

    • @captainpobtamere3024
      @captainpobtamere3024 Год назад +1

      @@TxInfinity that is disgusting for science

    • @lilydarkmoore8769
      @lilydarkmoore8769 Год назад

      @@captainpobtamere3024

  • @keithrides65
    @keithrides65 Год назад +6

    This was pretty amazing to see they were able to successfully launch this time. They were getting pretty close to their engine expiration of December (if I heard that correct). It did seem odd speed is given in MPh and not KMph knowing NASA does everything in metric.

    • @erikmattson2507
      @erikmattson2507 Год назад +1

      Good point. On September, 1999, the US Mars Climate Orbiter was burnt to a crisp because of confusion over the imperial and metric measurement.

    • @vicroc4
      @vicroc4 Год назад +1

      They're broadcasting primarily to an American audience. Metric measurements are far harder to visualize for most Americans. NASA knows this, being Americans themselves, so they translate their data to US standard measurements for the presentation.

  • @lancelehman1105
    @lancelehman1105 Год назад +4

    That rumble reminded me of the Saturn V back in the day. Pretty cool.

    • @per_unminuto597
      @per_unminuto597 Год назад

      then was a movie, just a movie

    • @Jeremy9697
      @Jeremy9697 Год назад

      @@per_unminuto597 yeeeaaah. All those ppl watching it literally take off were actors also

    • @Jeremy9697
      @Jeremy9697 Год назад

      @@per_unminuto597 what about the ppl who have died in failed missions? I guess they didn't really exsist lol

  • @cgaud1n69
    @cgaud1n69 Год назад +3

    It was a cool view from Oviedo, Florida, about 33 miles away from the pad. It left in a hurry compared to the smaller satellite rockets.

  • @GaryW48
    @GaryW48 Год назад +63

    Outstanding, and a beautiful liftoff!!!

  • @charlesmdasilva
    @charlesmdasilva Год назад +1

    That was absolutely fantastic and wondrous. The amount of power put to work in one spot is unbelievable. I can't imagine past or future astronauts thinking oh I want to sit on top of all that. Those guys are the greatest of the brave.

  • @goldmembership9063
    @goldmembership9063 Год назад +3

    Can you imagine how loud it is in the cabin 😮😮

  • @bosunhawk
    @bosunhawk Год назад +98

    With all the problems going on in the world, we need this to unify more than ever.

    • @johnlockesghost5592
      @johnlockesghost5592 Год назад +12

      It's sad that something a pointless as this would be the hope for uniting humanity.

    • @Wolf_3125
      @Wolf_3125 Год назад

      @@johnlockesghost5592 Wishful thinking. Don't get your hopes up. Humanity will NEVER be united. It's just another globalist talking point.

    • @MadeWidy
      @MadeWidy Год назад

      Yeah we got it!

    • @Jumpingjackflash123
      @Jumpingjackflash123 Год назад

      It won’t. Don’t worry. We’re evolved to be terrestrial beings

    • @Patrick-tt9xe
      @Patrick-tt9xe Год назад +7

      How's this going to unify? the media not even showing it