Orion spacecraft trans-lunar injection and separation
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- Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2022
- For NASA’s Artemis I (Artemis-1) mission to the Moon, the upper stage of the Space Launch System (SLS) performed the Trans-lunar injection about one hour and 30 minutes after being launched from Launch Pad 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on 16 November 2022, at 06:48 UTC (01:48 EST). About one hour and 58 minutes after launch, the Orion spacecraft successfully separated from the upper stage.
Credit: NASA
NASA’s Artemis I mission
Trans-lunar injection and separation of the uncrewed Orion spacecraft - Наука
The Earth seen by the Orion spacecraft on the way to the Moon ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
Artemis I launch ruclips.net/video/W0d4wOIXi5o/видео.html
Artemis I mission overview ruclips.net/video/kJSubTl3A3E/видео.html
Brilliant NASA does it again, it takes me back to watching the Shuttle missions as a kid.
I watched the shuttle launches and landings with my mom when i was a kid too.
Brilliant NASA does it again, it takes me back to watching the Apollo missions as a kid.
@@jamietrouskie364 no one asked.
@@coronalight77 Damn, no one asked for your asking.
Orion has done first Trans Lunar injection in the 21st century. God speed, Orion!! Enjoy the unmanned flight and view in Lunar orbit!!
Of a manrated craft.
@@oneukum exactly. Many spacecraft have performed TLI this century, including China's Chang'e-1
Not the first, and not manned.
India, China, Israel made a translunar injection in few years!
First TLI since 1972 with a spacecraft that can carry humans. 2024 be the milestone 52 years since humans have left earth's orbit.
Clips from the spacecraft itself are always nice to see.
This brings back great memories of the Apollo flights, specially Apollo 8 which orbited the moon at Christmas 1968 and sent back the Earth rise picture that really changed the way people thought about our planet. Great to see this international effort restarting manned exploration.
Still we are demolishing our planet. Do not know what it is but humans are stupid
VERY COOL!!!🤩 Brings back many Apollo memories!!!🥰❤️❤️❤️
Yep..Its been a while since anything human rated has done a TLI
Missed it because I was too tired to wait another hour just to hear it was scrubbed. I was totally wrong and regret missing it.
I was too young to remember the Apollo missions but I was 7 when the shuttle Enterprise was released from her piggy back ride from a 747 and that made me giddy but watching Columbia go up in 1981 as an 11 year old was even better. Now that there is activity involving the moon again, I will be able to experience at 52 what I was too young to remember 50 years ago, unless I drop dead first.
Thanks for these! I always look forward to watching your content to catch up. I watched from T-1:00:00 T+1:00:00 before calling it a night and heading to bed. I didn't have much left in me to watch TLI or sep. Thanks again for the great content as always.
I grew up as a kid through Mercury, Gemini, satellite missions Mariners to Mars, Viking one and two, first robotic Lander on Mars, Voyager 1 and 2, tour through our solar system, the space shuttle Orbiter let alone jpl's Mars robotic missions with the latest being perseverance and ingenuity, and now Artemis.. amazing Milestones NASA has done through out my lifetime.
Good journey, Orion :)
thank you very nice condensed video.
Thank you for sharing.
Well done you guys
Beautiful
Congrats from China!
Jokes aside, these is incredible. It's finally happened! Well done for the people of NASA!
Jokes aside? Bro this is like real serious stuff........... ;]
@@luxuriousfir Space exploration is real serious. My 1st comment posted was a jest, due to the ice crystals detaching from the capsule. And how it eventually get reported by some people.
@@OverlordShamala yes super serious..
... 😴
Amazing 😊
恭喜成功转移地月轨道,旅途顺利
Exciting!
that's cool
Good luck, NASA!!
Spactacular
We back !
Amazing
I wanna go sooooo bad! I don't care the risk... I want to go!
🤣
I can see landing there, being psyched about it for a week or two before I begin to wonder what I've gotten myself into. It is a barren, frozen hellscape with barely any atmosphere. It may be best for tech to evolve to the point where a base can be built autonomously so you have a ready-made base to move into when you get there. Otherwise it's gonna suck pretty bad for them. Once they get there, they can't just leave immediately. They'll be stuck for months, at least.
@@johnrex5342 I am now an old man. I would go even if it was a one way trip. Nothing to lose at this point and everything to gain.
@@kl0wnkiller912 That is a good point. In fact, it's a good argument to send older people. Older people won't be living for many more decades, so radiation exposure won't cut their lives short, as cancer can take decades to develop. They also aren't going to have more children, so we don't have to worry about their germ line cells getting damaged.
This is so cool. Hope we get to see some live videos of the moon and earth on the way back.ive been waiting for ever to see live video from a ship per say in true out space. 👍👍👍👍👍💯
Great to see
Godspeed
Excelente 👍👍👍🌟🙂 NASA
Very good. Soon these will be common.
very optimistic
Dude, I didn't know that Kerbal Space Program 2 was so lit! Let's gooooo!
I just remembered space is silent. No sound, darkness, and eptiness
I will vote for any tax increase I can if it goes to NASA. Awe inspiring stuff as always.
Totally. Space exploration, not war!
Derpy derp derp......
one of the best straight faced troll comments iv ever seen on youtube
@@pipjersey8303 How is he a troll?
It takes 3 days to get there? how long to get back? Really wish I knew. Cool video. Hope we get to go on the next one if all is well on this trip
They're in a bit of an extended orbit, so not as fast as the Apollo missions did it.
3 days
@@MeerkatADV Thanks for replying.
@@henk3484 3 days out, likely 5 days back due to extended flight plan.
amazing although I mess the resolution of the Apollo era film cameras
I was waiting for the "Go for the moon!" from "All Star".
where's that side camera mounted? on the solar panel?
I suppose yep, on panel.
it looked like it based on how the angle was changing initially as the array was moving
There's one on each panel if I recall what I read
Yep, that thing is covered in GoPro S cameras. Tiny little wifi cams.
Yes.
Удачного полёта! Мы вас на этот раз догоним.
How fast s it going 25,000 mph ? Which is earth's escape velocity ?
I have yet to this day seen a video of Trans Lunar Injection that shows a Spaceship moving away from the Earth at escape velocity with any perspective. I did see a short video of TLI from Apollo 11 that was taken from a ground telescope but it only lasted a couple of seconds.
Trans Lunar Injection...words not used since I was little...and first time this century
Godspeed Orion
Coolness
Go for TLI!
18 mins of thrust for the TLI is longer than I can last!!! 😁
Lol maybe if you aim for the moon you might gain some stamina
Bad bad bad lol
You gotta take the drink is those suspicious ads bro, anything less than an hour won't take you to space😅
I believe if I remember correctly the TLI burn for the Saturn was 7 minutes using the 3rd stage engine 200,000 lbs of thrust.
Safe journey Orion
CONGRATULATIONS NASA! (what a crappy time you picked! lol)
That little white dot at the bottom right in the second 39 of the video, what could it be?
Judging by it's size when compared to the spacecraft, it could be most things. Foam, a little piece that broke off, ice, particles from the fuel, etc.
It’s not aliens
Way to go Stanley.
I would have volunteered to go on the thing, nobody asked me though. You see I've got balls.
Really nobody asked you? I’m shocked they asked me
Yeah. You want to fly on a test article. We had to launch two Saturn Vs unmanned before a crew was sent up.
How many Gs would astronauts feel during the trans-lunar injection burn?
Approximately 0.27 G
Once in space you can sacrifice thrust-to-weight for higher efficiency, to get the most delta V with the least amount of fuel. Basically you need big powerful engines to escape Earth's atmosphere and gravity (reach orbital velocity of 17000 mph), then you can use tiny-but-efficient engines.
@@Grubbbee What speed does Orion need to achieve for trans-lunar injection?
@@fredflintstone8569 did some googling and orion performed an 18 minute TLI burn. That gives you an idea of how relatively small the thrust is compared to the mask of the spacecraft. "ignited its single RL-10 engine for an 18 minute burn that increased Orion's velocity from 16,840 to 22,670 miles per hour (27,100 to 36,480 kph)." If you are really interested in this stuff, I HIGHLY recommend you try Kerbal Space Program very fun and educational.
I guess that back solar aray burns up.. consumable???
The European Service Module, including it's solar arrays, will burn up on reentry and thus destroyed. It doesn't have a heat shield.
Sadly, all but the capsule itself is consumable. This is awesome tech, but very wasteful.
👍👍👍👏
Who is taking the video clips of the Artemis 1 mission. Is there a cam following the whole mission?
Explained here ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
The craft has multiple cameras pointing at itself.
The TLI burn does not break away Artie from the pull of Earth's gravity. Disclaimer:. I'm a cook, not a Rocket Scientist.
Agreed! And I’m a retired saw mill guy. Spacex launch / booster landing videos showing 2 sets of live telemetry with speed / altitude during the different burns have done more for my understanding of space mechanics than anything. Granted, I’ve not tried to understand the details but escape velocity 17K mph stands out and TLI takes it to even more. I just watched NASA live feed with first earth views 10 hours after launch and speed showing about 5-1/2K mph speed at 1/5 of the way to moon. And we have to wait until Monday for nearest moon pass. Doing a little rough math in my head here but it tells me we are very much under the influence of gravity. They need a live feed showing telemetry at all times during mission!
But then, I got into an argument with my science teacher in 8th grade when he insisted there is no gravity in space and what proved his belief was Gemini / Apollo videos showing astronauts floating weightless.
Indeed, the Moon itself is bound to Earth's gravity, it has it's own gravitational pull that's a given so the spacecraft only switches to the Moon SOI.
Apparently whoever writes those cringy scripts for the commentary at NASA doesn't understand basic astrophysics.
You are correct. The TLI burn simply increases the apogee of the orbit around the earth to that of the distance from the earth to where the moon will be in 3 days, then the gravity of the moon captures the spacecraft and takes over as the dominant gravitational force.
In fact let's say they did this TLI burn such that it just aimed for empty space and didn't meet up with the moon. It would simply slow down and then start back towards the earth and then orbit around the earth approximately every 6 days in an elliptical (egg shaped) orbit.
Only if the velocity of the vehicle exceeds the escape velocity, would it never return.
@@jkleylein I loved "translunar conjection"😂😂
It would have been nice if NASA supplied video of the earth receding or other pictures.It`s not every day we get new views from space.
The Earth seen by the Orion spacecraft on the way to the Moon ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
Can’t wait till we actually have nuclear rockets
Yeah totally! No way that could go wrong at all, I mean, what's a little atmospheric nuclear explosion really gonna do?
@@CGDubz87 We mean on spacecraft that are launched from Earth orbit.
Nuclear powered space craft have been designed, many types infact.
@@CGDubz87 so many ppl think nuclear is a scary word. That's not how nuclear power rockets work... not everything nuclear is a bomb. Just literally nuclear bombs.
i fell asleep minutes after the TLI started 😅
AMERICA!
FUCK YEAH!
this last and quite important the (European Service Modules) is made by the ESA (european space agency)
@@javierhillier4252 and the colbalt for the batteries was mined in Africa.
So I guess Africa is more important than the ESA. 😘
@@becausereasons3168 nah because where something is mined vs made is very different
@@javierhillier4252 can't make anything till the material is mined.
So Africa wins!🏅
@@javierhillier4252 can't mine something if the mining equipment isn't made.
China wins!
When I saw 'Orion' in the title, I really thought and wish they finally had actual glimpse of Orion, the constellation, up close and personal.
But quickly got myself grounded since it's 600+ LY away.
At this point, I really hope both Voyagers would capture images from out of the Solar System or at least the Oort Cloud.
Well the voyager cams have been shut down for 20+ years, but they wouldn't see much anyway. If they look back at the solar system, they could maybe make out Jupiter and Saturn as small dots. No asteroid or smaller planets would show up. A few particularly close stars might appear to be shifted slightly, otherwise it's basically the same as your backyard at night.
space is really big
Orion is a direction from Earth, not an actual object out in space. All of the stars are at different distances, as you know. Most of its stars have no physical association with one another. The constellations are just arbitrary conveniences for indicating direction in the sky from Earth.
@@maxv9464 I love that Carl Sagan convinced JPL to take that look back towards the Sun to get the famous Pale Blue Dot image of the Earth. All of the other planets were already just dots, even then. Space is ridiculously huge.
@@johnrex5342 Absolutely. Puts things in perspective. Earth is gigantic on the scale of a person, maybe even unimaginably large in scope. And yet we're still just a mote of dust.
I love that they've started to include cameras aimed at the actual spacecraft ... maybe they've always done this, but it's really nice to see
do any of the Mars satellites have this feature?
Yeah technology is really snowballing..........
They do this to be able t9 see damage on spacecraft. They're don't need outside view. They have computer positioning. And see everything via IFR.
Is there somebody inside?
Inside ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
alien is watching
Whos filming from above!!!!
Cameras on the solar panels ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
18 minute burn takes a lot to break away from earth orbit.
Yeah, seems long. I don’t recall what the time was for Apollo. Different technology back then.
Looks like it is still in earths orbit
Well the moon does orbit the earth.
PEACE
LOVE
HONESTY
FREE THINKING
GOOD HEALTH
SOBRIETY
OPTIMISM
4:52/5:44 shooting star
What is the space craft speed per km ?
384,400 thousand kilometers distance from earth orbit to the moon X 2 ( goin' + return ) = 768,800 thousand kilometers.
How many litres of fuel qty amount capacity and how huge the fuel tank in the space craft for journey in deep vacuum space ❓Heading to the moon and return back to earth ❓🤔
Okay, good explaination for me to learn and understand about the movement and the momentum of space craft traveling with less fuel usage in a deep vacuum space journey...due to no friction ( no air : heavy speed blocker as on earth ).
Something like the craft slides thru deep water too, but water is a heavy liquid and makes a craft speed momentum slowing down and required more energy fuel to push it forward. And in deep vacuum space without air, the craft speed momentum are more faster , triple amount of speed momentum rather than a craft moving in a surrounded heavy air . Air is a heavy molecule, right 👌🏻 it always drag frictioning and making a craft speed reduced compares to a craft moving in a non air spaces....no friction and no drag, so it moved more faster than a craft moving in the airy condition with more fuel consumption ( huge amount qty of fuel ) 😇🤔👌🏻
Thanks 😊👌🏻🙏🏻
@@matthewdavidjarvis6039
Very very valuable info regarding deep vacuum space exploration. Because I m a heavy science fiction sci fi enthusiast since I saw sci fi TV series in the late 70's and love making space craft miniature models. But in reality I even ( dream ) to built space craft with low budget ( home made ) cost for space travel and kept some prototype ( semi stage ) engine system ( alien tech ) design .
I always fascinated with space travel but trying to create better engine system ( not rocket fuel tech )...more to magnetic gravitational flight concepts unfueled engine thrust . Alien craft tech had been my inspiration. Hope in the coming future it will be a reality for me ( still a confidential tech design not yet ready to be deployed for flight test or 🎥 film... but hopefully the video will be available by next year ( anti gravity magnetic field wave drive system hovering craft ) to be upload in my channel, soon. Just for the world to witness this new tech engine invented by me personally.
Anyway, your great explaination enhanced my study research of space travel . Million thanks 🙏🏻 bro...👍🏻😇😁
Looking for the spacecraft per km ain’t a good measurement.
It’s better to look for the DeltaV a craft has. I don’t know the DeltaV of the launch vehicle, but I know Orion has roughly 1700 m/s of DeltaV as the Orion is only to be used for high lunar injections.
Blue Origin is building the tug and lander for the future Artemis missions in the future which will allow for lunar landing.
@@homiej8163
Thanks for the kind info.
Appreciated it 😉👍🏻🙏🏻
@@homiej8163
👌🏻😉👍🏻
There is something on the wing
Cameras are on the solar panels ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
Space gremlin!
In the old days they would put a dog or a monkey inside the thing.
sadly yes
PETA would most certainly have filed a lawsuit!
Or an astronaut.
@@paulkazjack Or Homer Simpson.
My vote is for Deep Space Homer.
Space chimps!
Ovnis 1.25
What's with all the kerbal swaying?
I suppose the camera is on a solar array that is gently oscillating while the engine is thrusting? They swept the panels back before the TLI burn because they feared the joints would be overstressed. Even swept back they can move a little and vibrate slowly.
🇺🇸💪💪💪🚀🛰➡🌕
un OVNI
As a 66-year-old that grew up with Apollo and beyond, I must confess to being very disappointed in the low quality and lack of camera footage on this flight. If they want to 'sell' the concept of going back to the moon to a larger, younger audience they will have to do a lot better than this poor offering. When one considers the number of cameras that were on the Apollo flights, this by comparison is a very lackluster affair indeed. Shame, as they have missed a great PR opportunity.
The Earth seen by the Orion spacecraft on the way to the Moon ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
Worth noting that we'll be seeing a hell of a lot on the manned missions. Pretty much all of the Apollo cameras were manned, not automated, with a few exceptions.
"The images and video collected by the Orion cameras will come in a variety of formats, ranging from standard-definition to high-definition and up to 4K. Each is tailored for a specific use and dependent on the bandwidth available during the mission to send to Earth or recorded on board to be analyzed after the mission ends. Due to bandwidth limitations on the spacecraft that prioritize transmitting critical data to the ground, livestream video quality will be lower than the onboard recordings. As a result, some of the highest quality views may not be received until well after they are recorded and can be downlinked."
Source: NASA’s Artemis I Cameras to Offer New Views of Orion, Earth, Moon, article from 15 november 2022
With all due respect, it's also important for me to point out that even the lower resolution GoPro feed we're getting live streamed in real time is objectively of superior quality to what the Apollo missions could live stream in the 1960s/70s through their S-band radio signal (which was considered low res and low frame rate even at the time). I think there might be a "nostalgia goggles" effect in play here ;)
'citing stuff!
I had a different trans lunar injection @ the Hospital 👊... 💉 😁
perigee or apogee.
Interim cryogenic combustion stage, wtf... I guess that is what college is for! lmao
Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage. Serves the same purpose as the Saturn V's 3rd stage and will be used until the Exploration Upper Stage is ready for Artemis 4.
So is there a camera man in space
Cameras are on the solar panels ruclips.net/video/nHxxKlye_Qo/видео.html
HISTORY ORION ARTEMIS NASA
Translunar meaning gay rocket😂😅🤣