Honestly I know a lot of how this works.. the physics and everything.. but when I watch things like this my logical brain turns off and I feel like a kid looking at something almost magical. How is it that humans found everything we needed on earth to reach escape velocity on this deep gravity well? It's insane. I love it. I can't get enough of it.
Hey John. Every time I attended a Shuttle launch I had the very same feeling: Everthing on that amazing vehicle was made by humans from air, oil, water and dirt.
Well, when you think about the fact that we are nothing more than bags of water living on a 4.6 billion year old rock spinning around a ball of nuclear fusion in middle of cold, empty space, you begin to appreciate the fact that our existence is absolutely miraculous and our accomplishments are truly remarkable.
Noe Carrier the massive shadow from the plume is awesome. I like it when aircraft also leave a shadow in front of them In the sky when flying with the sun behind them, but this blows that away
@@Nyxiality The solid rocket boosters on the Atlas V create a big cloud of exhaust. You can tell that line is the shadow from the plume, as it begins to expand near the bottom as the rocket continues to rise. Also when it pitches over far enough, you can see the top of the shadow
I like the minimal commentary. Just enough to keep you informed without unnecessary jawing. Commentator sounds like he’s knows what he’s talking about too. Terrific footage.
Try the technet channel on spacex launches, get the same thing. Usually they do 2 Audio streams, the main with commentary, and the technet audio which is just the radio callouts
Absolutely! I watched it many times, and I was amazed during the live stream cause I have never seen this before! Probably because usually they fly so perfectly that they never have to correct the trajectory
dude, the way it doesn't ignite for a few sec and you see nothing but gas had me clenching my butt for a moment but then it does ignite and you can see the acceleration so clearly !!!
Hey Tom. As you probably know, each of those first two U.S. Mars landers -- the Bicentennial Vikings of 1976 -- included sophisticated onboard chemistry labs searching for signs of life in the soil! (And the results remain controversial to this day.)
Russell S Yeah and hopefully, given the landing location of Perseverance, maybe we’ll finally have our proof of life. Getting to go with my dad to work was something really special - like a little kid at the candy store. What a great place to work!
@@thomasfholland My best high school buddy ended up an engineer, working for Martin in Denver. His group was "trajectory" for the Vikings. The reel-to-reel tape computer they used filled an entire room. They'd ask it a problem and go home for the night. In the morning when they returned, the print out would say something like, "Burn the engine for three seconds."
It burns a lot cleaner than the SRBs. Pretty much 95% water and CO2 emissions with some CO, NOx and excess carbon that’s harder to burn off than it would be in liquid methane fuel.
Excellent. The rocket cam is always the highlight of Atlas V missions for me. Please keep on doing them for all your rockets. Atlas, Delta, and soon Vulcan as well
Mapl3Bac0n It would still end up being incredibly long because you’d probably want more than a couple frames at Earth and Mars in total. So to keep it from being a total slideshow you have to reduce how much you speed it up by, which will extend the video length. By a _lot._
Good. Every launch provider should do this like spaceX. It creates a hype and a fanbase for the company, but also inspires people to work with these kinds of things. Well done ULA and thanks for releasing this footage.
@@profoxgaming6336 no, no need to, only the side that is going to be facing into the atmosphere as it enters, think about the Apollo capsules, heat shield is on the bottom, same with the Shuttle and Soyuz and Dragon.
ProFox Gaming You’re actually staring at the cruise stage on the top of the probe, used to provide propulsion until it is separated before entering the Mars atmosphere.
Just seeing the amount of work involved to get something the size of small SUV and the months it will take getting it to Mars without a single fault and then we still have to perform a successful touchdown of Perseverance, ensuring all systems stayed safe and nominal within that time, to finally perform one of the most daring sequence of events, to slow down the craft through the atmosphere via parsdhutes, then propulsively landing closer to the surface and further utilizing the sky-crane's retro rockets to further slow the craft to a hover, finally allowing for the lowering of Perseverance and her Payload ingenuity softly onto the Martian regolith via a sky crane. It is a finely choreographed ballet of integrated systems and machinery working together in beautiful harmony, for one awesome purpose. Godspeed Perseverance.
Also, damn! That's some good engineering if that motor is running above nominal! Congratulations guys and girls, and thank you for this fantastic footage!
When I see these kinds of footage, it boggles my mind. When the rocket goes up, you can clearly see we're here living on this rock, with a 100 km thick Biosphere, and we don't think about it on a daily basis. Note - this is no Flat-Earther disapproval comment, it's just mind blowing to me
okay does anybody else find it completely amazing that you can see the shadow of the vapor cloud behind the rocket grow across the planet as the rocket games altitude? Absolutely stunning!
as long as you can hear him its all that matters. Reliability, and microphone sensitivity is all that matters. The muffled sound is also because the microphone is designed to dull out background noise. But yes its old tech too
@@berserkguts4227 No i meant the guy who likes everything space and look at space companies subjectively. Plus he knows what he's talking about most of the time.
Frank Agustinus wrong, centaur is nowhere near powerful lol where would you get that from. I mean 110 kN. SpaceX merlin 1d vacuum produces ten times of that thrust. You may have meant “efficient”, right?
they can only send so much data to the ground and the telemetry gets a priority obviously. plus if something gone wrong they wouldn't want the footage to be public obviously
@@DingXiaoke I think the centaur stage uses it's reaction control system to do it. Yoyo de-spin I have only seen on satellites using a solid fueled kick-stage. They spin up to be stable during the firing of the solid motor which has no stearing. New Horizon used them.
Come on flat earthers. Gather your best 3D Modelers, Animators, Designers, Photographers and fake something that looks like this, like real life, but make it look like the earth is flat and the rocket is flying over the edge.
Lol yeah crazy to think the new standard is to land your boosters everytime now. Imagine how each mission to space before Spacex had a destroyed booster afterwards, that's a lot of waste
Matt Deegan well I’ll have to add this, until the point you do the recoveries fast and refurbishments quick your $/kg to orbit ratio will drop with recovery. But SpaceX is hitting that line, they’re reusing boosters a lot.
(▀̿Ĺ̯▀̿ ̿) I’m so tired of having to explain this but it is due to the aperture settings on the camera. If you could see stars, the earth would be very bright and saturated.
Harrison Key Well it’s annoying for a liveshow for half the audio to be a guy with an annoying voice yelling about MECO and the other half being the SpaceX crowd yelling at the top of their lungs, to the point where you can’t hear Mission Control.
Dale Sajdak if it annoys you so much then either put your volume on mute or you can just not watch their livestreams. The reason people cheer on SpaceX’s streams is because people are actually excited about the launches.
Harrison Key Yeah, or it could be how every other launch is, with the announcer and Mission Control in the background. If you want to include the crowds cheering you can put it on a video of the launch on the SpaceX channel. I, and most everyone else, don’t want to listen to it.
Dale Sajdak then just don’t? You can watch someone else’s video without the commentary. Plenty of people do the highlights of the mission, like launch, separation, and landings. Just watch those.
I'm an avid satellite watcher. I'm almost certain l observed one of the jettisoned sections of this launch in low orbit the other night. The object was not a regular satellite as it was not predicted on any of the multiple sat transit software l use. It was the brightest satellite flare I've ever observed and was a regular reoccurring flare every 6-7 seconds as the object was obviously in a tumble.
I’m spoiled by seeing a timeline countdown to all the events, so I was expecting it on this one too. But I’m glad ULA is starting understands the value of this type of footage.
Honestly I know a lot of how this works.. the physics and everything.. but when I watch things like this my logical brain turns off and I feel like a kid looking at something almost magical. How is it that humans found everything we needed on earth to reach escape velocity on this deep gravity well? It's insane. I love it. I can't get enough of it.
Hey John. Every time I attended a Shuttle launch I had the very same feeling: Everthing on that amazing vehicle was made by humans from air, oil, water and dirt.
Think about what more we will do. Occupy Mars
Well, when you think about the fact that we are nothing more than bags of water living on a 4.6 billion year old rock spinning around a ball of nuclear fusion in middle of cold, empty space, you begin to appreciate the fact that our existence is absolutely miraculous and our accomplishments are truly remarkable.
For all of our faults, a select minority has made seemingly impossible feats of engineering a casual reality.
@@greekpapi well said. Really makes you think doesn't it? Not to mention its wild to see how a human body actually works as well.
That shadow cast by the plume is really beautiful. You don't often see such a clearly defined one. Stunning.
That's a road I think
@@Nyxiality Nah, it isn't. Look how it develops and fades as the distances get greater. It's the shadow of the rocket plume.
@@Nyxiality it isn't
Noe Carrier the massive shadow from the plume is awesome.
I like it when aircraft also leave a shadow in front of them In the sky when flying with the sun behind them, but this blows that away
@@Nyxiality The solid rocket boosters on the Atlas V create a big cloud of exhaust. You can tell that line is the shadow from the plume, as it begins to expand near the bottom as the rocket continues to rise. Also when it pitches over far enough, you can see the top of the shadow
A flat earthers worst nightmare: a live view of a rocket all the way from the ground to orbit
Can’t you see the earth is flat around 5:00
@@coconutmilk1082 place a ruler on your screen and align it with the earth...
forks and popsticles I was joking
@@coconutmilk1082 ooooh
Connection Lost they don’t believe the iss is in space
I like the minimal commentary. Just enough to keep you informed without unnecessary jawing. Commentator sounds like he’s knows what he’s talking about too. Terrific footage.
Try the technet channel on spacex launches, get the same thing. Usually they do 2 Audio streams, the main with commentary, and the technet audio which is just the radio callouts
Congratulations ULA on another launch to Mars. See you in 6.6 months Perseverance.
And Ingenuity!!!!
@@thomasfholland Se you in 2021!!Buddy!!, I was thinking that they will arrive at 2031,but I was wrong 😇
It arrives 2 days after my birthday next year.. gana be the best birthday present yet 🎁
@@Hikes121 Perseverance is safe on Mars
It has landed yayy!
4:47 that engine gimbal honestly looked awesome
Absolutely! I watched it many times, and I was amazed during the live stream cause I have never seen this before! Probably because usually they fly so perfectly that they never have to correct the trajectory
@@phpART I was really impressed with how little they had to adjust the thrust angle to adjust the vehicle
@foxy 94 very true!! It was very unusual to see the angle of the thrust jet and vehicle!!
dude, the way it doesn't ignite for a few sec and you see nothing but gas had me clenching my butt for a moment but then it does ignite and you can see the acceleration so clearly !!!
Excellent job!! I’m so old I remember when my dad worked at NASA/JPL and sent the probes Viking 1 & 2 to Mars. So much has happened since then.
Hey Tom. As you probably know, each of those first two U.S. Mars landers -- the Bicentennial Vikings of 1976 -- included sophisticated onboard chemistry labs searching for signs of life in the soil! (And the results remain controversial to this day.)
Russell S Yeah and hopefully, given the landing location of Perseverance, maybe we’ll finally have our proof of life. Getting to go with my dad to work was something really special - like a little kid at the candy store. What a great place to work!
@@thomasfholland My best high school buddy ended up an engineer, working for Martin in Denver. His group was "trajectory" for the Vikings. The reel-to-reel tape computer they used filled an entire room. They'd ask it a problem and go home for the night. In the morning when they returned, the print out would say something like, "Burn the engine for three seconds."
Bon Voyage, Perseverance. Godspeed. And thanks to everyone involved in building and launching these machines.
Imagine, less than 1 minute, you could see the curvature of earth from above
Yeah, the 541 configuration is made to be a bullet off the pad. It’s amazing to watch.
🤣 you're not serious are you? It's called a fisheye lens...open your 👀 put a camera on the nose for once
@@antdifo i've seen the curvature myself, this is clearly not a fish-eye lens
@@inactive9948 you clearly have no idea what you're talking about. At what altitude did you see the curvature?
@@antdifo Zero signs of fisheye (or other) distortion. Everything EXCEPT earth is straight lines. Self delusion IS apparent, however.
Very impressive to see the module separating from the rocket and continue its journey into the dark....
I've caught myself with an "Interstellar" docking scene music plyaing in my head)
@Connection Lost I meant the darkness of space
Yeah but where is it's booster?
Plus it spins up right away as soon as it's released. That, or the upper stage booster is slowing down it's spin relative to Perseverance.
The exhaust plume from the liquid fuel motor is really cool. It keeps getting bigger as the air pressure decreases.
It burns a lot cleaner than the SRBs. Pretty much 95% water and CO2 emissions with some CO, NOx and excess carbon that’s harder to burn off than it would be in liquid methane fuel.
Other rockets : MECO
Atlas V : 🅱️ECO
Falcon Heavy: MECO and 🅱️ECO
@TotallyNotEnceladusDynamics bottomtext nui nui nuuuui lol. That's pure cancer.
whats beco?
@@sirejester Booster engine cut-off
MONACA Music 50 Cent Party sounding headass
7:12 Love how it looks like the capsule has started spinning.
Probably the cruise stage spin stabilizing the spacecraft for balance
@@gunnykido7213 Both Vulcan and Mars 2020 were spinning. After separation Vulcan stopped spinning.
@@IRennie222I *Centaur
@@duffman7674 Oh yeah, you're right. xD
y r u loving a piece of aluminium
I love working with ULA and NASA! Great job to all the teams involved!
In what way do you work with them? (As in what your role is)
Congrats! Probably a good relief releasing this bad boy.
Rocket Cam videos are the best
7:02 Farewell Perseverance and Ingenuity
That pillaring shadow from the exhaust gas is incredible!
Congratulations NASA and ULA! Wha??? 60 likes! Thank you all so much.
68, I have set the stage for one greater than me..
James Leblanc lol
Excellent. The rocket cam is always the highlight of Atlas V missions for me. Please keep on doing them for all your rockets. Atlas, Delta, and soon Vulcan as well
I want a time lapse all the way to mars
Would be boring as hell.
Video of a being in the middle of a void and two good frames at each end --one blue, one orange. 😂
7 month long video
FUN
@@hubbletrubble7875 A time lapse usually implies the video is sped-up, but yeah, it would still be really boring
Mapl3Bac0n
It would still end up being incredibly long because you’d probably want more than a couple frames at Earth and Mars in total. So to keep it from being a total slideshow you have to reduce how much you speed it up by, which will extend the video length. By a _lot._
I haven't played Kerbal Space program for a while. This just made me launch a Kerbal rocket again 🤣🤣
KSP 2 is coming. There goes your evenings.
Ha! Me too 🤣
@@b1laxson KSP 2 yaayy
The ending clip was just icing on the cake!!
Thanks ULA for releasing this footage. 👍 🌎🚀
Good. Every launch provider should do this like spaceX. It creates a hype and a fanbase for the company, but also inspires people to work with these kinds of things. Well done ULA and thanks for releasing this footage.
Imágenes maravillosas, ponen la piel chinita de la emoción... Felicidades 💥🚀🤩
And here i was in Orlando watching it from my backyard.
This was simply amazing. Thank you soooooo much for letting me see this.
Congratulations on the successful launch and thanks for sharing
Boy, that thing accelerates fast.
when thr rover separates at the end it has no heat prot3for mars entry wtf
@@profoxgaming6336 at the end we are looking at the top of the probe, the heat shield is on the other side away from us.
@@Ender240sxS13 shouldn't it cover the whole rover with it
@@profoxgaming6336 no, no need to, only the side that is going to be facing into the atmosphere as it enters, think about the Apollo capsules, heat shield is on the bottom, same with the Shuttle and Soyuz and Dragon.
ProFox Gaming You’re actually staring at the cruise stage on the top of the probe, used to provide propulsion until it is separated before entering the Mars atmosphere.
Just seeing the amount of work involved to get something the size of small SUV and the months it will take getting it to Mars without a single fault and then we still have to perform a successful touchdown of Perseverance, ensuring all systems stayed safe and nominal within that time, to finally perform one of the most daring sequence of events, to slow down the craft through the atmosphere via parsdhutes, then propulsively landing closer to the surface and further utilizing the sky-crane's retro rockets to further slow the craft to a hover, finally allowing for the lowering of Perseverance and her Payload ingenuity softly onto the Martian regolith via a sky crane. It is a finely choreographed ballet of integrated systems and machinery working together in beautiful harmony, for one awesome purpose. Godspeed Perseverance.
Wow, that was very cool. Watched the launch external but great to see full on board.
Also, damn! That's some good engineering if that motor is running above nominal! Congratulations guys and girls, and thank you for this fantastic footage!
When I see these kinds of footage, it boggles my mind.
When the rocket goes up, you can clearly see we're here living on this rock, with a 100 km thick Biosphere, and we don't think about it on a daily basis.
Note - this is no Flat-Earther disapproval comment, it's just mind blowing to me
I hope space tourism becomes affordable in my lifetime.
@@stevenwilliams1805 the first space tour using helium balloons will cost 25 million $ lol
I saw this in person like 5 miles away
Incredible thing to see in person. I drove 8 hours to watch the SpaceX Demo 2 launch
how was the sound?
That's lovely! Thanks for sharing with the world...
This is so beautiful I feel like crying.
Отличная работа, я очень волновался при запуске ракеты, но все прошло прекрасно. Ждём посадку на Марс в феврале.
That gimbal on the RL10C at 4:47.
D
d
A
d
A
D
A
D
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T
@Connection Lost its ksp raw keyboard input
but good one otherwise xdd
Absolutely beautiful rocket and launch, so powerful and efficient, 100% flawless.
Atlas V is such a beautiful rocket, go ULA
okay does anybody else find it completely amazing that you can see the shadow of the vapor cloud behind the rocket grow across the planet as the rocket games altitude? Absolutely stunning!
Come on flat Earthers spam the comment section about the curvature.
Please, don't lure them here.
They are all magically asleep when this stuff is happening
Waiting for the usual ‘it’s CGI’ or ‘fish-eye lens’ claims 🙈
@@davidanderson8591 has this not filmed through a camera? How can you rule out fish-eye lens effect, or rule out cgi?
Hahhahahaha
Beautiful.
Excellent footage! Thank you!!!
This is the most beautiful thing I've seen today.
I always wanted to know why does the guy talking still sound like he's talking into a wireless in 1959?
as long as you can hear him its all that matters. Reliability, and microphone sensitivity is all that matters. The muffled sound is also because the microphone is designed to dull out background noise. But yes its old tech too
The classic case of “If it ain’t broke don’t fix it.”
SpaceX's audio communication is modern and very clear.
@@tars1341 No.. SpaceX is bloated and unreliable.
@@hexagonist23 Sure it is. Too bad facts say otherwise.
How cool is the shadow after liftoff?!!?!!?
Now this is what I want to see.
I also can’t wait to see the rocket cam on the first Vulcan launch.
Awesome footage! Thank you for this :)
Excelent!!!!
Scott Manley will be all over this soon.
He was already "all over this" a day ago :)
@@randomnickify Not the atlas details though. He loves when the fairing separates and the ice gets knocked off
Hahaha
you mean the pro boeing guy who hates space x
@@berserkguts4227 No i meant the guy who likes everything space and look at space companies subjectively. Plus he knows what he's talking about most of the time.
ULA, Thank you so much for this NON EDITED and CUTTED footage. God Speed!
Eat this flat brain society.
But there *was* a camera cut, at 4:22.
@@WeeSleeket Changing cameras is not a cut.
Atlas Centaur, a great launch vehicle combination since 1963!
"Hrm Impressive" (said like darth vader)
6.6 months to reach mars...imagine the size of the universe
To reach the other closest sun would take us 150 000 years to reach it lol
@@angerskarin9222 scary sometimes 😶
@@kspavankrishna Well space is big, really big.
@@angerskarin9222 factss
Or maybe we are just too small
Great job!! Awesome footage
I think 🌍 is heaven. Looks beautiful staring at it from space.
Wait, no parking orbit? No phasing?
Direct injection from pad to mars?
I thought thy had to do at least one orbit, but no. Badabing badaboom!
Centaur is the key. Atlas' Centaur upper stage is still the most powerful upper stage to date..
Amazing rocket
Frank Agustinus wrong, centaur is nowhere near powerful lol where would you get that from. I mean 110 kN. SpaceX merlin 1d vacuum produces ten times of that thrust. You may have meant “efficient”, right?
You should have broadcast these images live, not two days after the launch!
they did, just wasn't possible to constantly stream it because of connection issues.
Stage separation was actually broadcasted live.
Why does it matter? They broadcast launches live all the time.
Remember that ULA is strongly connected to military.
they can only send so much data to the ground and the telemetry gets a priority obviously. plus if something gone wrong they wouldn't want the footage to be public obviously
When that upper stage gets going, it real hauls!
Man, I wished they had more of this video on the live coverage
7:17 Initiate the spin!!
No, it's probably Centaur de-spinning. They spin up before separation for spin stabilization.
@@zapfanzapfan cool! Is it using the yoyo de-spin?
@@zapfanzapfan is that spin stabilization for stabilizing during separation? So unwanted forces don't start spinning it over the poles?
@@DingXiaoke I think the centaur stage uses it's reaction control system to do it. Yoyo de-spin I have only seen on satellites using a solid fueled kick-stage. They spin up to be stable during the firing of the solid motor which has no stearing. New Horizon used them.
@@SahilP2648 So that it doesn't tumble? Yes, I think so.
Are ya winning son?
Flat earther son: Dad why does earth looks like this 3:11
Einfach nur spektakulär!
Like a bat out of hell that rocket
Slung off the pad literally
May be my favorite rocket after that
Thank you Russia, for supplying the RD-180 first stage main engine that makes the Atlas V possible! Go ULA! Go Atlas! Go Centaur! Go perseverance!
From Energia rocket
Rafa Towers not actually rd-180 is a scaled down version of rd-170 which was used on energia, but rd-180 wasnt used itself
Come on flat earthers. Gather your best 3D Modelers, Animators, Designers, Photographers and fake something that looks like this, like real life, but make it look like the earth is flat and the rocket is flying over the edge.
Loved The Video, I wish I could visit ULA plant in Decatur👍😆, to me they are the best of the best.
The last minute of the vid with the detach on the dark side of earh were you get to look into the abyss. It's interestingly haunting yet intriguing.
"You mean to tell me the boosters DON'T land themselves? That is SOOOOOO 20th century".
Lol yeah crazy to think the new standard is to land your boosters everytime now. Imagine how each mission to space before Spacex had a destroyed booster afterwards, that's a lot of waste
Matt Deegan well I’ll have to add this, until the point you do the recoveries fast and refurbishments quick your $/kg to orbit ratio will drop with recovery. But SpaceX is hitting that line, they’re reusing boosters a lot.
Dat earth is Flat as HELL ! ....... aw just trolling , it’s a cube of course
No its a hexagonal prism?
No its a donut shape you fool
Wait whut?..
@@Noam-Bahar I WOULD LOVE TO SEE ONE
Smh my head, its very obviously a parabaloid 🙄
Wow. Excellent.
Keep up the great work.
I just realized the black line on the on the screen is the shadow of the exhaust plume! Wow.
flat earthers: it's cgi
where are the stars?
(▀̿Ĺ̯▀̿ ̿) I’m so tired of having to explain this but it is due to the aperture settings on the camera. If you could see stars, the earth would be very bright and saturated.
@@thisguy8368 I think he's joking
@Connection Lost also: We've never been to Mars, but look at these scary images from the rover. They hide the truth from us...
@@tigers14 do not reproduce.
Nice... no stupid people cheering
SX learn
I guess being excited of something you worked hard on is bad now
Harrison Key
Well it’s annoying for a liveshow for half the audio to be a guy with an annoying voice yelling about MECO and the other half being the SpaceX crowd yelling at the top of their lungs, to the point where you can’t hear Mission Control.
Dale Sajdak if it annoys you so much then either put your volume on mute or you can just not watch their livestreams. The reason people cheer on SpaceX’s streams is because people are actually excited about the launches.
Harrison Key
Yeah, or it could be how every other launch is, with the announcer and Mission Control in the background. If you want to include the crowds cheering you can put it on a video of the launch on the SpaceX channel. I, and most everyone else, don’t want to listen to it.
Dale Sajdak then just don’t? You can watch someone else’s video without the commentary. Plenty of people do the highlights of the mission, like launch, separation, and landings. Just watch those.
Amazing, great job!
I so love this video. What a great view
Hey look! The Earth isn’t flat. Whodathunkit?
Precious video. Thank you. Let's wait for the one of Mars entry.
And here we are now (April 2021) watching a helicopter cruising over Mars!
That's right Alan. If it spots gold or diamonds, everyone will start making their own rockets. :-)
Thank you for this cool vidéo You Win another New subscriber!
Great video, hope we get to see more until landing
Fair winds and following seas Perseverance!
God speed, Percy!
this is awesome!
this is what i wanted to see on the day but they cut to that animation instead
Love your content! Keep it up!
I can watch these all day long, if I didn't have to work.
Yes!! we need more of cam like this !!
and Godspeed! to you Mr Rover.
Amazing.
I wish I was in there on the way to Mars.
I'm an avid satellite watcher. I'm almost certain l observed one of the jettisoned sections of this launch in low orbit the other night. The object was not a regular satellite as it was not predicted on any of the multiple sat transit software l use. It was the brightest satellite flare I've ever observed and was a regular reoccurring flare every 6-7 seconds as the object was obviously in a tumble.
Enjoyed watching that, thanks
beautiful footage right there
Wow Atlas V is one quick rocket.
My God, that is beautiful
My great uncle helped get us to the moon, it's great to see humanity taking the next step.
This is a way more interesting camera view. 👏👏👏👍👍
I’m spoiled by seeing a timeline countdown to all the events, so I was expecting it on this one too. But I’m glad ULA is starting understands the value of this type of footage.
Beautiful
Magnificent. 😃👍🏻👍🏻
Не мусора ,не метеорита вам!Счастливого пути!
That's what I like to see in a launch, thanks