A week after the launch of Artemis I, NASA's Orion spacecraft enters lunar orbit.
- On Saturday, the ship is anticipated to go up to 40,000 kilometres beyond the Moon.
- To make sure the vehicle is secure, this first test flight is being conducted.
- The future of the Artemis 2 mission will depend on the outcome of this mission.
NASA's Orion spacecraft was safely released into lunar orbit on Friday after completing the long-delayed Moon mission, according to authorities. Flight controllers 'successfully completed a burn to place Orion into a distant retrograde orbit,' the US space agency said on its website, just over a week after the spacecraft launched from Florida headed for the Moon.
For the first time since the final Apollo mission in 1972, the spaceship will shortly deliver people to the Moon. Orion will sail around 40,000 miles above the Moon due to the orbit's distance. Orion will take around a week to complete one-half of its orbit around the Moon. After then, it will exit orbit and return to Earth. It will begin its return journey to Earth after approximately 25 days of flight, with a landing in the Pacific Ocean scheduled for December 11.
Orion will take around a week to complete one-half of its orbit around the Moon. Then, according to NASA, it will deorbit and return to Earth. On Saturday, the spacecraft is expected to go a record-breaking 40,000 kilometres beyond the Moon. The current record is held by the Apollo 13 spacecraft, which is 248,655 miles (400,171 kilometres) from Earth.
The success of this mission will pave the way for Artemis 2, which will take men around the Moon without a landing, and Artemis 3, which would finally return people to the lunar surface. The success of this mission will pave the way for Artemis 2, which will take men around the Moon without a landing, and Artemis 3, which would finally return people to the lunar surface. Both of those missions are anticipated to take place in 2024 and 2025.