Splashdown! Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft back on Earth

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2022
  • NASA's Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft successfully splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Dec. 11, 2022. Full Story: www.space.com/artemis-1-orion...
    Credit: NASA
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Комментарии • 641

  • @lancelehman1105
    @lancelehman1105 Год назад +159

    I like that NASA did not launch this mission until everything was just right. They did not rush it, and made sure everything was ready and safe before lift off. It paid off with a good mission!

    • @jimmylieb5225
      @jimmylieb5225 Год назад +5

      Definitely agree! That’s an affirm.

    • @marmaly
      @marmaly Год назад +2

      Not surprising given their history.

    • @dacyteg
      @dacyteg Год назад +2

      Better than launching in foggy days

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +11

      If they only had a few billion more, it might have been delayed another ten years

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +5

      Yeah, but those launchpad explosions of SpaceX are a sight to behold. I hope Elon doesn't stop having them.

  • @hawkeyeten2450
    @hawkeyeten2450 Год назад +120

    And with that, a new era in spaceflight history has officially begun! Well done to all the folks at NASA who worked this incredible unmanned flight from launch to Pacific landing.

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      Nasa, going nowhere for 60 years

    • @godson3696
      @godson3696 Год назад +1

      4:36

    • @mattfraser3452
      @mattfraser3452 Год назад

      Tell me what role Australia has had since the First launch , your welcome in advance 🇦🇺

    • @neemiassilvasantos4470
      @neemiassilvasantos4470 Год назад

      Liar

    • @jamesluke8439
      @jamesluke8439 Год назад +2

      Congratulations another flawless CGI trip to the moon. The drop from a plane adds a nice touch. Nice we give these liars 93 billion dollars for such bad CGI🌎

  • @letsthinkbriefly3761
    @letsthinkbriefly3761 Год назад +12

    What an incredible time to watch space craft landing live! Cant wait to see Artimis landing on MOON live.

  • @brianszymanski2971
    @brianszymanski2971 Год назад +53

    Congratulations Artemis to the start back to what our forefathers had started back in the 1960s. My father would had been very proud of the achievements that so many hard working people have invested so much time and effort to make this happen.

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +2

      It was a great cartoon

    • @twocyclediesel1280
      @twocyclediesel1280 Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 Flat Earth is just an Internet hoax troll

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 . . . and you're a bitter, cynical, big ol' goof. 😸

    • @skxj
      @skxj 10 месяцев назад

      When did your family get a phone and a car ?

  • @peytonbass5396
    @peytonbass5396 Год назад +4

    It's nice to hear Rob back narrating the mission. He did an excellent job with the shuttle missions.

    • @andyelkins883
      @andyelkins883 11 месяцев назад

      and i just know he'll be there for the first artemis moon landing

  • @jimmylieb5225
    @jimmylieb5225 Год назад +14

    This sure brought back memories of the Apollo missions splashdowns from when I was a young man in HS. Back then there was no onboard cameras so seeing the reentry from inside the capsule is so very neat. Certainly not as nail biting though as it was waiting for the Apollo 13 capsule reentry in April 1970.

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +1

      No steam when it hit the water, THUNDERBIRDS ARE GO!

    • @twocyclediesel1280
      @twocyclediesel1280 Год назад +1

      @@richspillman4191 That’s nice dear!

    • @yoskarokuto3553
      @yoskarokuto3553 Год назад +1

      it brought back shameful memories

    • @michaelbrown2778
      @michaelbrown2778 Год назад

      I thought they would have a more modern space ship
      Not s old style rocket and capsule??

  • @janwilliams579
    @janwilliams579 Год назад +6

    This means so much to me having watched liftoff and splashdown since probably Mercury. My dad for some reason was fascinated by the space program and so we watched whatever was broadcast - on CBS since that is what we could get. Early on, I had no idea what I was seeing let alone the importance. I do remember clearly all of the Apollo missions. I still think that we need wings and wheels, but this was awesome, memorable, beautiful.

  • @JL-lg8tk
    @JL-lg8tk Год назад +4

    Watching a capsule splash down in the water harkens back to the days when I was a kid watching the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs splashdowns.

  • @juliestevens4627
    @juliestevens4627 Год назад +17

    Oh those three parachutes with red and white stripes popping out of the capsule, trailing behind then unfurling in the wind to bring the capsule home, just gets the heart pumping. Not to mention the spectacular launch!

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      It should have been a rainbow

    • @OzCrusader
      @OzCrusader Год назад

      @@richspillman4191why?

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 . . . or the Batman logo. 😺

    • @thorthegodofthunder9150
      @thorthegodofthunder9150 Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 why? So assholes like you could complain about it for a month?

  • @RobertNielsen1970
    @RobertNielsen1970 Год назад +19

    As I watched this earlier today, I wondered if the way I felt (excited as heck) was in any way similar to the way people felt back in 1969, watching Apollo 11 re-enter and splash down. I loved how the Public Affairs Officer said, "From Tranquility to Taurus-Littrow, to the tranquil waters of the Pacific, the latest chapter of NASA's journey to the Moon comes to a close. Orion, back on Earth."

    • @mahbriggs
      @mahbriggs Год назад +2

      I hope not!
      We could have done this 50 years ago! In fact we did!

    • @RobertNielsen1970
      @RobertNielsen1970 Год назад +3

      @@mahbriggs Not sure what you mean, exactly. I'm saying that I wonder if the excitement I felt, watching Orion splash down, was similar to how people felt watching Apollo 11's reentry and splashdown. And that I loved how the Public Affairs Officer mentioned both Apollo 11 (Tranquility Base) and Apollo 17 (Taurus-Littrow) as the mission ended.

    • @anilrao4591
      @anilrao4591 Год назад +8

      I watched all of the Apollo missions back then and yes it left similar to the way I felt back then. So excited to return to the moon!

    • @RobertNielsen1970
      @RobertNielsen1970 Год назад +5

      @@anilrao4591 I wasn't born until November of 1970, so the moon missions either happened before I was born (Apollo 11-13), or when I was just a baby (Apollo 14-17), but I've spent most of my life reading about the Apollo program.

    • @anilrao4591
      @anilrao4591 Год назад +7

      @@RobertNielsen1970 It was amazing to walk outside and look at the Moon during the missions and realize that there were humans walking there! Since then I've had the opportunity to meet and chat with several of the Apollo astronauts. Very gracious, everyone of them.

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 Год назад +5

    Leaves in fire, returns in water. Absolutely beautiful!

  • @NeilGastonguay
    @NeilGastonguay Год назад +27

    To a person whose family didn't own a car until he was 7, and didn't have a telephone until he was 12, the presence and immediacy of this amazing technology boggles my mind. Utterly amazing.

    • @jimreilly6933
      @jimreilly6933 Год назад +2

      Spot on Neil ! although in my case it was 14 before we had a telephone, and I was 26 before I owned a car.

    • @skxj
      @skxj 10 месяцев назад

      When I was born my Dad phoned my grama who was coming to help my mom when she came home with me in the family car. After that we had a new car every three years and this was in Canada before it's Centennial. NASA and it's science fiction is legendary and this story continues that great tradition. If you guys get paid by NASA to help their narrative because you have to feed your family I have no unkind words but doesn't it bother you when you look in a mirror ?

  • @steelcityspeedshopj.r6942
    @steelcityspeedshopj.r6942 Год назад +17

    What a truly terrific mission. Flawless . All thanks to all of you amazing folks that have worked tirelessly for years to get to this point! Congrats🎉 . And now this step has been completed . We are now well on our way to sending it back up with souls onboard. So much exciting times truly. So happy

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      it was a great cartoon

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 Год назад +4

      @@richspillman4191 Why don't you think this is actual footage from the spacecraft?

    • @twocyclediesel1280
      @twocyclediesel1280 Год назад +6

      @@sailorman8668 He’s just a flat earth troll who wants attention

  • @commoncitizen03
    @commoncitizen03 Год назад +4

    Gratitude for this streaming 🙏 and heartiest congratulations for the NASA team for this wonderful sucess👏👏

  • @karengilchrist9774
    @karengilchrist9774 Год назад +3

    Wasn't able to see it live, just watched it now. NASA, you are amazing! Congratulations on a successful mission. Welcome home Orion!

  • @Thousand_yard_King
    @Thousand_yard_King Год назад +6

    All the flat earthers brains are exploding today!! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @diegfb2001
      @diegfb2001 Год назад +4

      They're all flatbrainers keep saying "it's CGI" haha

    • @79benzy
      @79benzy Год назад

      Every video pertaining to rockets and space there's always somebody who has to make a stupid comment about flat earth believers... Most times there's not even a single comment about flat earth theory. Why must you "beat a dead horse" over and over again? Do you feel overwhelmingly satisfied after said comment? More than anything you're just sounding like a jackass! Puff up your chest and hold your head very high Velcro1167! You're making the world a better place u jackass!

    • @Thousand_yard_King
      @Thousand_yard_King Год назад +2

      @@79benzy sounds like a hit a sore spot? Lmao.

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      why? Are you impressed by this fakery?

    • @JacobLM42
      @JacobLM42 Год назад

      @@79benzy Flat earth theory?, good one lol.

  • @Jefflantern483
    @Jefflantern483 Год назад +5

    Welcome home Orion! Fantastic & job well done! 👍👍👍 Watching the splashdown sure brings back memories of the Apollo missions that I remember when I was a little kid in the late 60’s & very early 1970’s! 🙂🙂

    • @juliestevens4627
      @juliestevens4627 Год назад +2

      Same here. Born in 1960. We gathered around the old black and white TV to watch.

  • @paulmurphy8182
    @paulmurphy8182 Год назад +8

    I watched this as a boy in the 60s and today in my 60s nice work Nasa

    • @Drew_Hurst
      @Drew_Hurst Год назад +3

      Cost 60 million a day too coincidentally!

    • @cheesequaked
      @cheesequaked Год назад

      Super cool bro ❤👏

  • @genehauser9217
    @genehauser9217 Год назад +19

    Watching this brings back so many memories of watching the Apollo Splashdowns. Very exciting!

    • @michaelhays2158
      @michaelhays2158 Год назад

      Let's see artimis do it again before 4 More years of setbacks.

    • @dacyteg
      @dacyteg Год назад

      @@michaelhays2158 nah just 2 years

    • @tarheelblue63nc25
      @tarheelblue63nc25 Год назад +5

      @@michaelhays2158 blah blah blah

    • @looneytoons2878
      @looneytoons2878 Год назад

      You mean capsules being pushed out of a cargo plane

    • @dacyteg
      @dacyteg Год назад

      @@looneytoons2878 I would like to see a plane that can reach the tip of atmosphere, very interesting isn't it huh

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 Год назад +3

    Mission success! Can't wait to see Artemis II fly in May 2024!

  • @fredMplanenut
    @fredMplanenut Год назад +7

    Nice job, precise and what future astronauts will be very pleased with.

  • @HYDRA...PHOENIX
    @HYDRA...PHOENIX Год назад +19

    Excellent work NASA A another step for mankind. 💕

    • @blitzroehre1807
      @blitzroehre1807 Год назад +1

      We had this step before in the 1960s even the drogues had the same color scheme

  • @dedebell9365
    @dedebell9365 Год назад +1

    Wow! Congratulations Artemis and Orion! Beautiful!

    • @EdSheeranmusic
      @EdSheeranmusic Год назад

      Hey Dede 👋. you took the words right out my mouth!!! How do you do? Are you very active on RUclips?

  • @malvinmudenda2792
    @malvinmudenda2792 Год назад +1

    Amazing indeed! Gave us some wonderful views of the moon & Earth from Space!

  • @user-wk4em4od4s
    @user-wk4em4od4s Год назад +2

    Perfect machine. Perfect work in the world. Perfect team in the world. Perfect mission. Thank you very much my friend.

  • @mauricephilippebellagamba3930
    @mauricephilippebellagamba3930 Год назад

    C'est extra magnifique cette ' New Era' .....comme si jamais ils n'avaient essaye' avant ! Merci bon Courage pour la suite ! Bravo

  • @germandhers3262
    @germandhers3262 Год назад +2

    Congratulations NASA and all the men and women involved in this incredible mission to make human kind back in the moon and beyond.
    I’m so proud ✨💫

  • @luyeyendomatezo5956
    @luyeyendomatezo5956 Год назад +2

    Congratulations Artemis team

  • @rronay2732
    @rronay2732 Год назад

    Congratulations way to go!! Let the manned missions begin!

  • @hingedelephant
    @hingedelephant Год назад +1

    Wow. That brings back some memories.

  • @luziapestana8210
    @luziapestana8210 Год назад +2

    I am looking forward to see, astronauts inside Orion. Cheers fr Madeira island.

  • @georgewhitehead8185
    @georgewhitehead8185 Год назад +8

    I am thrilled for this whole entire space flight, and return, but I must say that I think that the photography of the splashdown could have been of a much higher caliber.

    • @ericbrayer9354
      @ericbrayer9354 Год назад +2

      First thing that came to my mind was that someone should send nasa a new gopro for the capsule and see if someone on the Portland had something better than and iPhone 4 to record the splashdown.

    • @rexracer1872
      @rexracer1872 Год назад +1

      there probably is better available, just not released yet. my guess anyway

    • @blitzroehre1807
      @blitzroehre1807 Год назад +2

      Pure nostalgia on the side of the filmcrew who made it look even worse in quality than 1969, haha

    • @neilarmstrongsson795
      @neilarmstrongsson795 Год назад +1

      They could've at least put some steam coming off of it for extra authenticity.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself Год назад

      @@neilarmstrongsson795 Nutter.

  • @ruudwilschut9095
    @ruudwilschut9095 Год назад +2

    Congratulations NASA in this first step of the successor of the Apollo missions!
    Finally we have serious space travel again after the great manned Apollo landings. Can't wait to see the first humans walking on the moon again. In Full 4K UHD! 😊

  • @simongurden9848
    @simongurden9848 Год назад

    Superb job guys! Well done

  • @RogerioMotta1234
    @RogerioMotta1234 Год назад +1

    The parachuts fantastic !

  • @belleringr6377
    @belleringr6377 Год назад

    Beautiful works!

  • @jbustop
    @jbustop Год назад +4

    Fantastic!

  • @philgos3353
    @philgos3353 Год назад +1

    Great job guys 👏👏🍾🍾

  • @The-KP
    @The-KP Год назад +1

    Beautiful!

  • @ryuk5673
    @ryuk5673 Год назад +2

    simply amazing

  • @tombystander
    @tombystander Год назад +4

    Really hope they will have better footage they can release now that the craft splashed down

  • @johnkru1295
    @johnkru1295 Год назад +2

    Excellent jobs, everyone!

  • @melodyofloveinblood
    @melodyofloveinblood Год назад +6

    Literally imagine going 'around' the moon and safely coming back, just wow

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +3

      Exactly, imagination...cartoons

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 Год назад +1

      @@richspillman4191 Are you one of these deluded flat earth believing fools that doesn't think anything has ever been into space?

    • @frankdank7507
      @frankdank7507 Год назад +2

      You mean like we did over 50 years ago?

    • @twocyclediesel1280
      @twocyclediesel1280 Год назад +2

      Truly amazing. Much respect to those at NASA who made it possible.

    • @melodyofloveinblood
      @melodyofloveinblood Год назад

      @@frankdank7507 exactly

  • @tristanmourant942
    @tristanmourant942 Год назад

    Brilliant mission.... exquisite ending

  • @javierderivero9299
    @javierderivero9299 Год назад +6

    Is snoopy alive and well???....the real hero in this mission

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      just as alive as the cartoon we just watched

    • @UwU-ok2jr
      @UwU-ok2jr Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 quit spamming conspiracy theories or i'll turn yo mama into a cartoon

  • @brucehamilton7702
    @brucehamilton7702 Год назад +2

    Awesome!!! Can’t wait for the return to the moon!!!

  • @channarosenblatt8197
    @channarosenblatt8197 Год назад +4

    A truly grand moment for all of us. Albeit something 'mickey-mousey' about the view offered us through a window aboard the aircraft carrier, perhaps showing us the low emphasis on views by us, the people of this country. At the very least those who mounted the camera would have removed the sticker on the window and perform some basic cleaning. This isn't nitpicking. Had this been done, we would have had a far superior image with a picture of greater clarity.

    • @almscliffe
      @almscliffe Год назад +3

      It's not an aircraft carrier, it's the USS Portland, a transport ship. Whatever you think is a sticker is on the Orion window, and given that the thing has just re-entered the atmosphere it's hardly surprising there is muck on the bloody window!

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      we know a cartoon when we see one

    • @midlanderhyur6035
      @midlanderhyur6035 Год назад +1

      If you watched the full stream from NASA, that sticker-like thing in the overhead window wasn't there before and was in fact clean until the outside of the capsule ignited into up to 5000F as it entered the earth's atmosphere. It's a dirt accumulated from that process. I am actually more surprised we can see anything at all from that window after the signal came back. I thought the outer part is going to be full of burnt dusts.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +4

      @@richspillman4191 . . . and WE know a bitter, paranoid, trolling, conspiracy chump when we see one. You're welcome! 😺

    • @UwU-ok2jr
      @UwU-ok2jr Год назад +1

      @@TheStockwell theyre most likely trolling i find it really hard to believe people actually think space is fake let alone those people clicking on a space video

  • @b43xoit
    @b43xoit Год назад +2

    Wish they would report distances and speed in SI.

  • @zarl5238
    @zarl5238 Год назад +3

    Again a small step for people of Earth...and many more to come.

  • @olegen77
    @olegen77 Год назад +1

    Perfect fit! Btw

  • @Jungskeptiker
    @Jungskeptiker Год назад +1

    Such a complex mission needs much time to plan it and to check several times every detail. Therefore politicians should never apply pressure onto NASA.

  • @abdulkarimtalb9178
    @abdulkarimtalb9178 Год назад +1

    Congratulation NASA and to world for Orion spacecraft successful mission to Moon otbit

  • @thairinkhudr4259
    @thairinkhudr4259 Год назад +1

    7:08! There it is!
    8:36! And Splash Down!

  • @foxerhu5127
    @foxerhu5127 Год назад +2

    congratulations to NASA!

  • @FepitaSusuota
    @FepitaSusuota Год назад

    !!! Congratulations NASA!!!

  • @mattfraser3452
    @mattfraser3452 Год назад +2

    I have seen this many times as a child , it hasn't gotten old hahahaha !
    Off to Mars we go ✌️♥️🇦🇺🥃🥃🇺🇸

  • @philshifley4731
    @philshifley4731 Год назад +3

    I hope higher rez images will follow

    • @joeconiglio
      @joeconiglio Год назад

      Yeah after censorship like 2-3 months? Look at the boring James Webb with a few pretty pictures like a new recording of Brahms or Mozart . Let's look at the Exoplanets within a few light years from here!

    • @mr.framar0t339
      @mr.framar0t339 Год назад

      @@joeconiglio What's your contribution? Just being a clown on the Internet

  • @catianesouza8604
    @catianesouza8604 Год назад

    Isso é incrível! O mundo do universo!
    😳😱👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
    Que chato não saber inglês! 🤭😁

  • @therichtershow
    @therichtershow Год назад +2

    amazing advance to space and beyond

    • @frankdank7507
      @frankdank7507 Год назад +1

      Advance? Hell, we did more than this over 50 years ago!

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Год назад +2

      @@frankdank7507 Nothing you're looking at here is 50-year-old technology.

    • @frankdank7507
      @frankdank7507 Год назад

      @@SloaneLasers Exactly! All this new technology and they're doing exactly what was done over 50 years ago. Show us some progress!

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Год назад +4

      @@frankdank7507 They didn't build an orbiting space station around the Moon 50 years ago. They didn't build a moon base 50 years ago. Do some research. Learn why.

    • @maskonfilteroff3145
      @maskonfilteroff3145 Год назад +1

      Beyond space?

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Год назад +1

    Well done NASA!.. a giant leap forward for humanity 👍🚀🌍

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад

      How is a repeat of 60 year old tech a leap forward?

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 Год назад +3

      @@richspillman4191 Why do you think the current rocket technology should be much different from the Apollo technology?
      A rocket is still required to get into orbit around the earth and then further out into space, and the only part of the original rocket that enters the earth's atmosphere on return is the crew capsule.

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Год назад

      @@sailorman8668
      No, but tech that old, and literally reusing used parts means this stupid thing shouldn't cost $4.1 billion dollars per launch.
      And it's actually a LOT more than that. If they do their planned 1 launch per year, in 10 years the price per launch will be down to just over 8 billion per launch when R&D is factored in.
      Even NASA has literally said it cost too much to make it useful.
      Decades old tech and reused parts......
      They don't call it the Senate Launch System for nothing.
      This is nothing more than Congress giving their buddies money.

  • @malcolmar
    @malcolmar Год назад

    Amazing! Well done NASA. Well done.

  • @perrytheupsetter6645
    @perrytheupsetter6645 Год назад +1

    Turns out that only real men will go through the Van Allens belt.

  • @nazirkhyber
    @nazirkhyber Год назад

    Great Journey... Its not back its just a new start....😊

  • @marmaly
    @marmaly Год назад +3

    50 yrs later and the landing looks identical.

    • @DRUmBEaTTS
      @DRUmBEaTTS Год назад +2

      Right?!?! I thought I was watching it on a 50 year old color TV! LOL

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +2

      It's not as if they can change what the ocean or parachutes look like. 🐧

    • @blitzroehre1807
      @blitzroehre1807 Год назад

      The parachutes even have the same color scheme..orange white

  • @joestimemachine6454
    @joestimemachine6454 Год назад +4

    Be cool if they chose Apollo 14's landing site in the future and find Alan Shepard's golf balls he hit.

    • @rwill156
      @rwill156 Год назад +2

      And replace his divots.

  • @jeffsiegwart
    @jeffsiegwart Год назад +1

    Success!

  • @suzylarry1
    @suzylarry1 Год назад

    nice history !

  • @TheYaziman
    @TheYaziman Год назад

    Lovely Jobly

  • @foxmccloud7055
    @foxmccloud7055 Год назад

    We had a lot of smiles at Trinity United Methodist Church in Grand Island, Nebraska when Orion came home.

  • @lindakent1741
    @lindakent1741 Год назад +3

    This is awesome video thanks Nasa get job everyone 😀

  • @ahsahsahs9043
    @ahsahsahs9043 Год назад +1

    NASA ROCKS 🔥😍🔥

  • @ferdinandobarros2897
    @ferdinandobarros2897 Год назад

    Great!

  • @adventure9119
    @adventure9119 Год назад +1

    This should be bigger news

  • @clutch2827
    @clutch2827 Год назад

    Seems like it blasted off just yesterday.

  • @Hockeyfan9884
    @Hockeyfan9884 Год назад +1

    I love this.

  • @khumbulanikachamba
    @khumbulanikachamba Год назад

    Wow.

  • @kenet71
    @kenet71 Год назад

    Where is tom hanks & gary sinise? 🚀

  • @rogergarner2000
    @rogergarner2000 Год назад

    Zx81 next ✔️

  • @chre3611
    @chre3611 Год назад

    Tbat nasa is still working with such antique measurement like feet and miles is quite frightening. I doubt we get to the moon this way.

  • @SargentRail
    @SargentRail Год назад

    No one clapped like Starship on April 20th!

  • @suryajhanwar4676
    @suryajhanwar4676 Год назад +1

    Congrates nasa.।।

  • @melodyofloveinblood
    @melodyofloveinblood Год назад

    Desperately waiting for Artemis II 2024 now😼

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +1

      Won't happen 'till 2030 minimum

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 Год назад +3

      @@richspillman4191 Where did you get the idea from that this mission won't happen until at least 2030?

    • @richspillman4191
      @richspillman4191 Год назад +1

      @@sailorman8668 Look at everything nasa does, Hubble, webb, artemis all grossly over budget and 10-20 years late...past performance in this case is indictative of future results, 50 years of going nowhere

    • @melodyofloveinblood
      @melodyofloveinblood Год назад

      @@richspillman4191 technically your not too wrong, but do you rember how nasa pulled out Apollos? Literally 3 months gap! But if we see they might take longer than 2024 cause they don't wanna fail these missions, its the laying stone of galactic era ( exaggerating a little) and if these fail nobody will see mars or anything as a new home, it's only 1 chance and they wanna do it right.

  • @eddywells5689
    @eddywells5689 Год назад +1

    Great job 🍺🍺💞💞🙏🙏💪💪💪👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @Freedom2x462
    @Freedom2x462 Год назад

    Yehey Congratz

  • @tammy2161
    @tammy2161 Год назад

    interesting!

  • @JA-fw6lp
    @JA-fw6lp Год назад +1

    0:17 Is the capsule reusable?

  • @melodyofloveinblood
    @melodyofloveinblood Год назад

    I desperately wanna hear what Snoopy has to say about his trip😁

  • @markdoty1213
    @markdoty1213 Год назад

    Then the next big step. Good deal.

  • @elefman601
    @elefman601 Год назад

    προσθαλάσσωση ρε, τι Splashdown

  • @tscotom
    @tscotom Год назад

    Yikes, for a while, seeing the Orion capsule not in a 'perfect' (tilted to one side) orientation (I thought something was amiss !?! ), and then the announcer saying that it was descending in the proper/perfect orientation, ...
    Might I say, unlike ALL THE NASA splashdowns I've watched for decades, that tilted orientation is CORRECT, because it minimises the 'bellyflops' splashdowns of the Mercury, Gemini to Apollo Space Programs.
    I would like to think that that is the choice/result of Elon Musk's Mind, ... and that makes a different World of Difference.
    AWESOME.
    😉🙃🙂😇🤩

    • @jalexb88
      @jalexb88 Год назад +1

      yep, like Apollo, Orion has an offset center of gravity which gives the capsule lift during re-entry... it can control its trajectory simply by rolling around.

    • @tscotom
      @tscotom Год назад

      @@jalexb88 If the Apollo's tilt was likewise, (maybe not at that same angle, I honestly thought something was wrong !)
      then that 'lift during re-entry ... control ... trajectory,"
      even more AWESOME !
      😉🙃🙂

  • @Tommy_Boy.
    @Tommy_Boy. Год назад

    Feels like 1969

  • @apolloskyfacer5842
    @apolloskyfacer5842 Год назад +5

    Splashdown! Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft back on Earth !

  • @olegen77
    @olegen77 Год назад +1

    It turns out that in the universe now there are several gods - this is a man and his computers. Yes, there are 2 gods in the universe. How do you like it?

  • @kate4biglittlevoices
    @kate4biglittlevoices Год назад

    Make anyone else a little motion sick ?

  • @MrLewooz
    @MrLewooz Год назад +2

    I was 7 for the first spash down of apollo 11....

  • @onefatstratcat
    @onefatstratcat Год назад

    10.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 and a 4.7 from the Russian judge :)

  • @lnr12241
    @lnr12241 Год назад +1

    Well done ti everyone involved. Great job. Now let's all pray the next launch doesn't take so long and has way less problems. Sorry so cynical but. . . That first one took forever

  • @k29king1
    @k29king1 Год назад

    I always wondered what the experience was for those that witnessed the moon missions in the 60’s was like, and now i know because this is basically cut and paste of those missions with just a more technologically advanced spacecraft and rocket. Bravo NASA. To me it’s bittersweet, because imagine how much further advanced we would be in Space Travel had not Congress gotten in the way so many times by greedy selfish politicians that only cared about their next election rather than advancing humanity. It took a private space company to reignite American interest in space travel. Hopefully Congress doesnt get in the way of progress again.

  • @youtube.youtube.01
    @youtube.youtube.01 Год назад

    This restores my faith in Boeing after their 737-MAXX disasters.

    • @sailorman8668
      @sailorman8668 Год назад

      *MAX

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Год назад

      It shouldn't.
      This thing had several problems since they tried to launch it the first time.
      *$40 billion in R&D costs using old tech and previously used parts*
      And just look up what the problems were.
      Even NASA has said this thing is trash. LOL

    • @DRUmBEaTTS
      @DRUmBEaTTS Год назад

      This wasn’t the Starliner capsule.

  • @earth2006
    @earth2006 Год назад +1

    To bad it's going to be 2 plus years of Boeing's upper echelon management bonus check enhancements till we see another mission. Personally I think those same management types should agree to forgo bonus checks until we walk on the moon, probably cut the time in half.

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Год назад

      Personally, I think you should work for free too, just to show us how patriotic you are.

    • @earth2006
      @earth2006 Год назад

      @Sloane There's a difference. I'm not asking anyone to forgo a regular paycheck, it's the gigantic by any discernable standards bonus checks, the competition for the biggest, corners cut, delays in delivery of finished products, budgets over ran. If this was the 60's and they were building brand new technology I could possibly understand it. They are using legacy technology. We went from not even having real blue prints to standing on the moon in less time than has already been used, the question is why, two real reasons, government boondoggles and lack of will, the other, corporate greed. One you can't really ever change, the other, can, for go bonuses till we have humans, American humans standing on the moon, take corporate greed out of the equation, bet the time to finished product on the launch pad ready to go is cut by at least half.

    • @SloaneLasers
      @SloaneLasers Год назад

      @kraigstclair2841 Ah see, just as I thought. You ain't willing to give up your money either.

    • @earth2006
      @earth2006 Год назад

      @Kraig StClair America boots on the surface of the moon, till then no bonus checks. We'll be there before this phone becomes obsolete.