Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) Mission
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- Опубліковано 22 лис 2021
- On Tuesday, November 23 at 10:21 p.m. PST, Falcon 9 launched NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission to an interplanetary transfer orbit from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. DART is humanity’s first planetary defense test mission to see if intentionally crashing a spacecraft into an asteroid is an effective way to change its course, should an Earth-threatening asteroid be discovered in the future. This was SpaceX’s first inter-planetary mission.
This was the third flight for this Falcon 9’s first stage booster, which previously supported launch of Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich and a Starlink mission. - Наука та технологія
"humanity's first planetary defense"
Fiction to reality there. 😮😎
Interplanetary offence is better sounds. Just imagine, heavy unstoppable asteroid heading into China or Russia.
Perhaps they know something is coming but not willing to tell us due to the mass chaos it would cause. *tinfoil hat
Asteroids are no bigger threat to humanity than we are
@@SyNcLife i agree
@@MultiHotFlash Jesus that's dark.
This should qualify for the record of Longest sniper shot in history.
Clearly you havnt seen my COD montages
@@leatheljamie nice promo
i really want to but it is an engine powered and guided missile, not ballistic like a bullet but more like a cruise missile :x
Just to be clear, there have been rocket propelled bullets used in the past. Even if its not technically a bullet , hitting a moving target 192,000,000 miles away at 15,000 mph has to be some kind of record. Lol
Longest shot AND largest projectile, I'd say.
Hearing “planetary defense” in a non fiction context blows my mind…
I am so happy rn
Where am dem damned ALIENS??? We are ready for your sorry ASSES!!!
Who the hell is m?
@@strangewayfaringstranger rn means right now
SpaceX is amazing for its rockets, but it's also amazing for its webcasts (hosts, graphics, and music) and letting UA-camrs watch and report on Starship development at Boca Chica, TX.
I agree but I feel like they could do better with their sound on these videos. I'm all for hearing the engineers and technicians back and forth but just watching the Apollo 11 documentary (I know sound was done in post production) but their use of sound is just unbelievable. If there were a way to capture the sound of that raw energy as the rocket is taking off and beginning its accent I think it would make for much more exciting viewing. This kind of thing: ua-cam.com/video/VUQgBPjGmAQ/v-deo.html
Basically everything NASA has been doing for decades.
@@ThinkingDoesMakeMeImportant no they don't. Not at the level of SpaceX
@@nobeltnium NASA has landed on Mars. what has space X done again?
@@rosscoghlan They are a space company, not a video production company. Let them concentrate on core business...
Not only can SpaceX send anything anywhere, they make it look so easy. Good job.
Except it's all smoke and mirrors like NASA
@@davedivvy3965 Go walk off the edge.
@@davedivvy3965 ok dave
@@davedivvy3965 how about you go on a voyage and click an image of the edge
@@FrankBenlin can't as we're surrounded by an ice wall. The who map is the actual Map earth is flat, we've never been to space and everything you've been taught is a lie to keep you a slave. Elon is a front man for the evil elites don't buy it
Congrats SpaceX, wishing the DART team a successful mission, can't wait to see final asteroid collision.
When we will see it??
@@victormatarranz5480 End of September or early October 2022 is the scheduled collision
Let's just congratulate NASA as well, for once
@@whyiseverysinglehandletaken2 well, the DART team is a NASA team, but yes, NASA should be congratulated for supporting this mission too 😎
So basically there flying the craft into an asteroid what is the point. It’s hardly going to save us from a big asteroid
I've been watching these launches since the Apollo missions of the 60s. These things never get old, only better camera angles.
and MUCH more frequent!
RIGHT? At 60 y.o. now, I was one of this kids that want to be woken up, & WAS, to see the moon walk!
Here after the historic DART impact into Dimorphos!!! Congrats to NASA and APL, and thank you SpaceX for helping them get there!
This is for you, Dinosaurs!
Underated comment for sure. You had me cracking up man laughing.
😂😂
🥇
Not very often we get a NASA mission streamed in 4K!
NASA IMAX
Unfortunately the video from space is really only 640x360, just upscaled.
Upscale probably with help big brain AI
@gelas lawas Haha.. You can't even type can you? Just copy paste... I bet you bought a keyboard off wish
Seeing earth from that distance makes you realize how fragile we are and yet how lucky we are to be alive!
Great teamwork and an astonishing achievement!
Don't forget how fast the sun is moving through space. - we are hurtling through space in a big spiral - dont plan too far ahead :)
@@brentgreeff1115 That doesn't really matter though. All motion is relative. Everything is moving fast relative to something else, doesn't matter for our purposes.
@@brentgreeff1115 We may be moving at a velocity relatively fast compared to the speeds we achieve on earth, but in the context of space it's extremely slow. The probability of colliding with anything of note is astronomically low. Even the closest solar systems to us are completely out of reach.
@@storm5013 - Gamma-ray burst is more likely.
I wish they would have continued showing second stage as earth was getting smaller and smaller! That was awesome to watch!
I'm proud of humanity thanks to such amazing people. You're one of those who's standing in our vanguard.
Applause from Russia
Hey! YOU Started It!
Thanks! I'm looking forward to seeing Angara and Orel fly!
Please, no more space stupidity from russian military ASAT.
@@anthonykevinkerr3594 That was a message to Elon. Don’t ignore us.
@@anthonykevinkerr3594 as our news said - it was an old soviet not working satellite and rocket did a delicate hit without consequences to some others. + they said that USA and some else do absolutely the same for a some period of time. Goes like "it's a common thing some governments are also doing. Why again all evil goes on us?".
How it was irl - don't know, but it's what they say here.
Thank you Spacex, John and Jesse, exceptional professional performance!
Those two are the "Voices of SpaceX". Professional, informative and yet they seem to never lose their excitement for every successful launch they commented _(or not, see Jessie's social media)_
Such a perfect combo!, Their voices are soothing yet creates excitement
And NASA, why does everyone forget them? lol
"A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft has launched from Space Launch Complex 4 at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Launch time was 10:21 p.m. PST on Nov. 23 (1:21 a.m. Nov. 24). DART will soon be on its voyage to rendezvous with an asteroid."
Successfull impact... Congratulations SpaceX and Nasa
Isn't it wonderful? 🙏❤️
00:23:00 Ignition
00:50:42 Booster landed safe
01:18:42 DART deployment
Incredible work, SpaceX and NASA
They just transported it. Most of the work was done by NASA. It's like not appreciating not appreciating samsung for making a phone you bought but appreciating the delivery guy..
Well, if that delivery guy did a backflip and re-entered the atmosphere, I'd say he's impressive.
*NASA and SPACEX
"A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft has launched from Space Launch Complex 4 at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Launch time was 10:21 p.m. PST on Nov. 23 (1:21 a.m. Nov. 24). DART will soon be on its voyage to rendezvous with an asteroid."
24:03 - Daaaaamn that sonic boom was satisfying!
They make it look so easy, in reality the technology is " out of this world "
Nasa/SpaceX partnership is incredible. Thank you all for sharing this with us
Man the music starting from the beginning of this stream is just such amazing music.
What I loved, and none of the commenters mentioned was since they were going to a much higher altitude than usual the way the earth looked so much smaller behind the second stage than we are used to. You really get a sense of how far they they were going. Especially noticing the slow rotation of the second stage.
Exactly! I wish they would have showed more footage of the second stage camera with our blue 🔵 in the background, just phenomenal!
@Amped Up really? that would be the scoop of the century. surely you have solid proof to back up such a claim
@Amped Up Would be amazed to see sources of this claim, any available?
What amazes me that even at 7000km away velocity is decreasing at way more than 1m per second. I guess the moon at 400 000km is still stuck to us like glue, but I thought at this distance that we would see much lower rates of deceleration. Watching this, made me realise, it wont be long & we will be watching humans on their way to Mars, - with a semi-live video feed. Couple of Starlink satellites bridging the gap. - hmmm - "Star Link" - how ambitions is Elon really?
@Amped Up 🤡
"the asteroid is only 2 football fields in size"
ah yes, the proper scientific unit of measurement for asteroids
Which code of football :)
Peak of usa measurements
Let’s see? What the conversion to JWST tennis court units?
😎
Agreed - needs axial dimensions measured using the international standard length of a brontosaurus 🦕 or a blue whale 🐳
Cubits, furlongs, rod, chains?
Good to see John’s cheerful person on this launch - the others are good and just as knowledgeable in their own way - but a launch without John does not seem quite the same 👍😀👍😀
I 100% agree. definately the "voice" of spacex
Love the space music tracks and just watching the Earth rotate.
High altitude earth views are the best
Yeah nice and squared 😉
We're lucky it was launched by SpaceX. Other launch providers wouldn't have had those camera views
Experiencing this in person a few miles away from base is amazing! This is history in the making!
@Amped Up You can see that on the video feed too. Pretty standard
@Amped Up yeah, I got lucky this time to be able to see it at night because usually here it’s foggy every time they launch at night.
I never get tired of watching these space missions. Amazing what mankind (SpaceX) can accomplish!
NASA
@@strangewayfaringstranger well they had to travel on Russian rockets before SpaceX so..
Didnt know mankind was called SpaceX
I hope Jessi and John always do these streams. They're both great, and super cool in their own ways.
So excited we’re really lucky to be living in the space age , everything is happening so fast it’s unreal !!
This is not a space age. It happened decades ago.
@@kvm1992 Dumb comment
@@strawberryhavoc5127 My thought exactly Strawberry!
@@kvm1992 Who's Mr. Grumpy today then? It's little Aquarius! Yes it is! He's a grumpy-bumper! Who's a grumpy-bumper?
@@GrapeFlavoredAntifreeze It's easier to say something is dumb than it is to explain exactly how that's the case.
God I love the launch music, the song after is just spot on too, amazing atmosphere to whoever put that together!!!
Sounds like a Grimes song
I was on a mission to figure out who made the first song in the break after stage 1 landing. It's Test Shot Starfish - The New Astronauts.
Test Shot Starfish have made most of SpaceX's webcast music
Mankind is playing Darts 🎯. Had goosebumps watching this. Thanks SpaceX, thanks NASA - You rock!
Those images looking back at Earth from much further away than usual are beautiful
Awesome launch today SpaceX!
You do realize this is NASA right?
@@strangewayfaringstranger You do realize that just the payload is from NASA right? SpaceX was the launch provider, and it was launched by SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket.
The DART is going to hit "the bull". Good work, SpaceX and NASA.
It’s gonna barely dent that asteroid
ua-cam.com/video/8rh6qqsmxNs/v-deo.html
@@Popes_Dopes But it will change the velocity of the smaller one thus altering the course of the larger one... Regardless of your opinion
@@GetawayFilms *facts not my opinion
@@Popes_Dopes How do you know? You did the numbers? The fact is, if something hits something with enough force, that force is transferred to the object, thus changing the trajectory. At least that's the idea, who knows if it will alter it significantly enough.
SpaceX commentary is so well done. Great work by all which makes "impossible" events just look routine.
Who is watching this again when the DART satellite is just before impact?
🙋♂️
This is the way
Thank you JohnI and Jessie - you always manage to create great webcasts!
This is phenomenal! Finally this kind of ABSOLUTELY VITAL projects is being pushed forward. Thanks for helping to make it reality!
GOD: "Don't mess with those asteroids."
20yrs later.........Earth: "REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!"
And then we die of the et cold
@@berndeckenfels Somebody will come up with a space blanket by then...
John has a great voice for rocket launches - Space X missions are so good with his voiceover.
Good work boys!!!!! Stoked for yet another success!! It’s a good time to be alive! Thank you!
A very exciting thing to witness. These are the moments when humanity's dreams and visions are getting transformed to reality. And SpaceX has played a big, big part in it!!
I feel lucky to witness this new and exciting advancement in human space development. I just hope our thirst for curiosity keep fueling these launches rather than competition between nations.
Outstanding once again, Go SpaceX, go Nasa and thanks for sharing this real time event which has awesome views and educational commentary. Good luck with DART from England UK.
Terrific achievement and tremendous coverage as always. Fascinating to follow the telemetry: velocity, altitude and so on. But then suddenly there's a shot of the second stage with the earth behind it as a blue ball, then you realise just how fast and how far, all within minutes. Fantastic!
I would love to watch the second stage for longer. Maybe watch the payload drift away. The second stage keeps up for a very long time. IDK. Neat things going on, want to see as much of it as I can. Great job everyone.
I'm sure they keep the footage.
You have the best camera views of all the launches in the world! Seems like I compare them all to SpaceX and nothing compares!! Nice to recognize people from SpaceX! Great graphics! Congratulations on the successful launch and deployment!
Keep up the excellent work. Enjoy watching the launches. Never gets boring.
Some great footage from DART cameras of Earth in the background. Great work and congratulations to the engineers involved and people at Space X.
Bravo for the whole and entire SpaceX team to provide this important mission capability for mankind’s future. Awesome work!
I’ll continue to watch with interest from out in the ether… Success in all future missions!
SpaceX seems to be top quality from top to bottom! What a great team.
what a incredible view
John is a legend... I hope he does these broadcasts forever!
Congratulations and well done, SpaceX! Good luck on your mission, NASA and DART team..
Really cool to see those rare live views of our planet from so high up, like a nice poignant reminder of what the DART missions ultimate goal is meant to protect. It would have been so cool if you guys kept the second stage camera pointing at Earth longer after deployment, we don't often get a chance to see that kind of perspective live.
Oh my God this is mindblowingly awesome
You all are incredible. Every mission is humbling.
I am SOOOOO thankful to be alive and be lucky enough to witness this. This is truly AWESOME and I have basically no words to express how amazed I am.
Well done NASA and SpaceX. You showed that asteroid who's boss!
If only the dinosaurs had this technology they may be still roaming the Earth.
Not without thumbs
@C Dawg Thank you for the acknowledgement. That is quite an accomplishment these days.
@@GetawayFilms In a parallel Universe they may have grown thumbs and had a robust space program.
Actually I believe it’s almost impossible to deflect/avoid an asteroid of the size that killed the dinosaurs, even for us humans
@C Dawg Neil Degrasse said the same thing, are you calling him stupid? Cause if you are, well YOUR comment is the stupidest comment.
Awesome job SpaceX, as always. Thank you for bringing such wonderful coverage.
This is where the fun begins
Congratulations on another successful launch! GO DART!
Thanks, really thanks Space-X for this amazing times and space age that you guys are making possible for us to be witness.
Awesome SpaceX! Such a privilege to be able to witness this, thank you SpaceX and Nasa!
I love John's input. He's an amazing host, I love how they have people who work in other departments doing their streams!!!!
Anyone else notice how there's an "Earth" at the end of the location text at 4:50. SpaceX is a whole other vibe
They did it! :D
John, you have a great voice. Thanks for hosting this launch. ❤️️
My two favorite SpaceX commentators. Can't tell you why. Probably just because they were there on past missions I watched and loved.
One in the eye for the flat-earthers; the escape trajectory really shows our beautiful planet in all its spherical glory.
Hmm.. If only it were that simple to persuade an idiot. I'm afraid we're never going to convince their contradictory minds
True, you are more inteligent that 0,00000001 % of Earth population. Meanwhile half of Americans don't know to point Europe on the map. Looking at your curent president, americans are the flat erthers of the planet.
"it is just CGI" 🤡
Use Google Earth and zoom out while looking at camera height. Go out to 7,400 km and see how close you still are. You need to be at over 30,000 km before seeing what they showed. It is like the red bull "space jump". He was 38km and they showed a ball full earth. It is so hard to believe anything they show when they do things like that. Like the Tesla earth view when at 164km they launch it and show a ball earth. Not saying the earth is flat just saying it is hard to believe what they show us.
It's never that easy with stupid people.
This is a great mission, GO NASA AND SPACEX!!
This is AMAZING! Hope your mission is successful and does it’s job. This is really cool and I can’t wait to see you guys on Mars soon!
good job space x!! 😃wishing the dart team a succesful mission
What a exciting mission for SpaceX And NASA! We hope DART Mission could be successful crashing into an asteroid 💥
How's this any different from Russia shooting down a satellite
@@Ban00 The asteroid may eventually hit the earth, the russian satellite is not going to do much damage
@@Ban00 the asteroid is much much further away, it rotates around the sun not around the earth
Congratulations SpaceX on your first interplanetary mission! Picture perfect launch 👌🏻
Awesome Earth view. Congrats to SpaceX team for this launch and deployment. Good luck Dart 🤞
Congrats again SpaceX! Just insane how reliable your equipment is.
If the dinosaurs had done a DART mission, maybe they'd be still here today.
When I first heard that SpaceX was launching the DART mission I was sure it would be on a Falcon Heavy. I did not know that the Falcon 9 was this capable. Go Falcon Go SpaceX
the payload is light.
@@RobertLutece909 E M wanted to stop the FH development because of this at one point, however there had been already made contracts and they had to finish the development despite its rare use
@@nocivolive Doesn't matter ot has to go very fast. Solar Parker Probe is also small and launched on Delta IV Heavy.
ua-cam.com/video/iM8v0ibMaQo/v-deo.html
Thank you for posting these videos
A textbook launch and mission! Congratulations SpaceX for your professionalism and drive, a might work horse you have perfected in the Falcon 9!
Watched the launch last night from my back yard. The thin cloud cover caused the whole sky to light up a yellow orange glow. One of the more impressive launches that I have seen.
Meanwhile at Blue Origin…
The lawyers.....
At least you could watch a Falcon 9 upper stage flying by in space from the capsule of a New Shepard if the timing is good ;-)
i could never get enough of watching the reusable first stage landing...thank you so much for sharing these missions
Outstanding and best whishes for the success of the mission.
It's amazing to see 2 small objects collide in a vast space, I hope they will succeed because this is really hard
Of course they will. To achieve gravity assits they have to hit a point in space way smaller than the asteroid. These keyholes are often just a few meters accross and the hit them going 6-15 km/s. The precision NASA pulls of with some of these probes is unimaginable. And they did that before super computer with sliderules for Voyager.
It's in a "nominal trajectory" and Newton's laws of motion still apply. Unless something influences its trajectory from here, it's pretty much certain to hit.
@@JohnDoe-jh5yr yes but their computers are amazing
SpaceX making fiction a reality day by day. Awesome!
Another spectacular launch! Great job SpaceX! You are amazing! Thanks for sharing this in real time!
Love it. Almost as exciting as watching the first falcon 9s and even the first OG grasshopper hops
It feels funny to know that one day this could be necessary
Spacex is good at everything logo, rockets, videos, concepts, etc.
Hopefully not in that order... When your logo is better than your rockets.. You.. WILL have problems
24:00 That supersonic boom was really incredible
Jessie's back!!! She does a great job hosting these streams. Please keep letting her do more hosts in the future!!
We need proactive measures when it comes to defending a planet with civilization from an asteroid or unknown bodies if it brings harm.Hope things will go as planned.Good luck #DART #NASA #SpaceX
Awesome
Wow, that live view of the Earth from 6800+ km was truly amazing!
Always an amazing launch when John and Jessie are the presenters!! You guys deserve all the love and respect in the world!
You can say they've tried so hard and got so far! These f9 launches always make me so numb but I don't want to break the habit of watching them though!
@@Mrfailstandstil Your response made my day, bro!!!
@@ignaciomartinchiaravalle ayy glad to hear it bro, lp for life!
Who's here from don't look up?
"I wish my CGI was this good!" - Jeff Bezos
Lovely video. One of the *most* important missions in human history. Thank you SpaceX and NASA for this. 👍👍👏👏
Watching a satellite drift off toward the sun, from the launch vehicle's perspective, is part of the future that is amazing. Thanks NASA and SpaceX