Best of luck for Dearmoon. I think you are the most desiring candidate for this . Watching you since four years now . Great content. Your description of rocket engines are the most clear on UA-cam . Thank you so much. Keep up this great work.
DART and the JWST (to me) is Science Fiction come to life. It's a strange feeling that something this awesome actually exists. In our time, it can feel like everything possible is already done and there is nothing truly new. But there is a whole literal universe out there full of possibilities. Missions like these are proof that humanity is just at the starting line of a marathon
What made 2022 for me was hearing Tim will be flying around the moon. I think that made the mission so much more interesting for me. I am looking forward to all the updates!
Thanks for the show. It is great to reflect on these scientific achivments and honor the folks behind them. Also, you forgot honorable mention Joe Barnard for successfully retropulsivly landing a amateur rocket!!
Another awesome video, the difference between your videos, and other people videos are that it seems like you really enjoy the content and you put your real emotions into it, and very excited about the content. thanks for another awesome video, you are never negative, and always find the positive in every situation, we need more people like you, Thanks Tim have a fantastic remarkable year, you deserve it.
Just a correction. The communication with the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) was lost in April 2022 and was confirmed by ISRO officials in September 2022. So technically the lifetime of MOM should be from 27 September 2014 to 4 April 2022.
So excited to see a Canadian go to the moon on Artemis 2!! Congrats on the dear moon announcement Tim! You’ve inspired me and I wanted to say thank you for all that you do!
SpaceX should have gotten another AstroAward, not for a specific launch but for the cadence of launches! More than one launch every 6 days! Absolutely Impressive!
Thank you Tim Dodd! For continuing to inspire after so many years of doing what you do. For continuing to stay out of politics in such a divided time. And continuing to unite us around our humanity. For being open and honest and cheerful about your "merican bias" while also celebrating across the arbitrary boundaries that separate us as humans. I don't believe that what you do is an easy thing to do. And you do it so well! Keep up your amazing craft. So much love and respect.
Well done. I was fortunate to see the first moon landing, got to play with some aerospace stuff, and still get a thrill from it all. Can't see as sharply as when I was a boy, but still keep looking up in awe. Always smile and stop to appreciate the moon and the visible planets, feels funny to have been gawking at them for almost 60 years.
I have noticed one thing about the way Tim talks about Starship. In the past he would occasionally say phrases like, “assuming Starship works“ or other qualifying statements that encompass the possibility that Starship might not work. But since he has been chosen for the Dear-Moon mission, I’ve noticed that he has dropped using the qualifiers that encompass a possibility of non-success. This has made me wonder if it is part of his Dear-Moon contract to only state that Starship will be successful, or if he made a choice to put “good vibes out to the universe“. I guess a realistic third option would also be that perhaps he knows things that the rest of us don’t, and he knows that Starship will almost certainly work.
I’ve only made two videos since the announcement, and both of them were reflecting on a relatively lack luster year for Starship. I’ve actually rarely doubted starship will work in the long term and always tried to express some level of cautious optimism knowing the first flights will be risky, failure prone. I have no doubt that Starship will work long term dude to the momentum and progress already made. It might have to scale down or be less ambitious from the original design goals for reusability or something, but yeah. I’m free to still express my opinions, fear not. However I am likely projecting a bit more success in the program knowing my life will literally be on the line now at some point.
@@EverydayAstronaut Thanks for the reply Tim. Of course we are all very excited for you, if not occasionally just a wee bit jealous. We will be putting out the best of thoughts for the success of Starship and for you on the upcoming great adventure. I am glad to hear that positivity in the Starship endeavor is not part of some behind the scenes contract. Hearing your unfettered opinions and enthusiasm is one of the best parts of your channel.
I do believe that DART exceeded expectations by hitting the fully predicted level of change. I think the ejecta might have even given it a small boost. The expectation was that DART would underperform, though it wasn’t known by how much. To see it be so effective was far above expectations.
I'm patiently waiting for the astro awards with awards... maybe next year :D great picks, hopefully 2023 will make it even harder for you to pick the winners
Tim always nice to see you! 😊😊😊❤ As far as your being chosen! Well good for you! It is your child like sincerity and honest nature that make you perfect for this. I pray that you don't have too long to wait....😅😊
@Tim Dodd You are very good at making these videos. You obviously put a lot of effort into them and there is no sloppy hand-waving like many other UA-cam videos. Thank you for that! I can't think of a better person to be sent around the moon! Big congratulations on that!
Such a great way to review the year in space. Your positivity always lifts up the rest of us. (Calling Starliner's flight very successful was pressing things a bit, but OK, it gets carried along with the rest.) I didn't fail to notice that sorting through all of the suggestions and wringing out your own judgments took *a lot* of work. Thank you! The whole appearance and tone of your show has a certain sophistication. And kudos to your team, finding and putting together the right clips took lots of time and judgment, I'm sure.
@@MartinTheGhost To me there's a significant difference between mostly successful and very successful. The problem with the thrusters during the flight was very disturbing. If it happened by itself, then OK, the backup system worked. But there was a big problem on the ground with the sticking valves in the thrusters that delayed the launch for many months while NASA and Boeing worked out the problem and the solution. For there to be a problem in flight after all that is pretty bad. IIRC the in-flight problem occurred in a different type of thrusters but I have no doubt an intense spotlight was on reviewing *all* of the thrusters. That spotlight failed??? It's not just one problem or another. It's that the type of failures on OFT-1 revealed deep levels of poor engineering decisions and management at Boeing. That required a long review with NASA. After all that there was still the problem with the sticking thruster valves. More review. After all that, there was yet another, different inflight thruster problem. Considering the history, OFT-2 earned close scrutiny. If that last thruster problem was the single problem on OFT-1 then it wouldn't have been a big deal. For it to occur on OFT-2, with all that history, means I my threshold for success is high. Successful, OK. Very successful - no.
Has there been news on why Dart was so much more succesfull than expected? Was Didymoon (Dimorphos) lighter than expected, more solid or what? I would assume lighter since we knew exactly how much energy would be impacting it.
Thanks for putting this all together. Really enjoyed video and really helped update Me on events and passings this last year. Looking forwars to more. Thx!
My favourite was NASA's rocket around the moon followed by DART & Fire - fay's successful launch & not forgetting Spacex incredible Falcon 9 success. Great show & many more in the New Year. Slainte Tim you do a great job & congrats. on going to the moon, your a braver man than me. Never catch me on a rocket, no way but worth mentioning your Dear Moon Project.
25:35 No mention of the Red Team that just an hour or two before launch fixed that one last hydrogen leak under that huge fully-loaded ready-to-go rocket? There's more to the video, I'm hoping they at least get honorable mention as Heroes Of The Year!
That was great; thanks Tim!! Congratulations to NASA as well, especially as regards to the JWST; what an incredible achievement to get it up and working properly 👍👍
At first it was a little sad hearing it would be a night launch but honestly, seeing how much it lit up the sky, I couldn’t be happier with that launch
Great as always, your Videos, but most importantly Space adventures. Tho, I would have loved the Catch from Rocketlab to be mentioned somewhere, yes it wasn't a catch without touching water, but still. Hope it will be in the 2023 Awards. Best of luck to all these amazing People, Companies and Missions in the Space Industrie, Love to see this exiting Future.
Kind of blows my mind to think about that the last few of the Apollo astronauts (allegedly) left the Moon the week before I was born... I sure hope I'll live to see a permanent Moon Base being established! EDIT also: fingers crossed for some orbital launches from Swedish ground.
I had the opportunity to hear Gen. Hermaszewski speech live in September, a few months before he passed away. He was a great person. His stories were immersing (couldn't find a better word).
I've been very fortunate to have followed the US Space Program from it's beginning and especially all the Moon landings. I really hoping that I'll still be here to witness mankind's return to the Moon.
I wish SOFIA was updated/refunded. I know it was expensive and we have the JW now, but infrared telescopes are really important for finding astroids, and its a beautiful instrument.
All real live Rocket Boys!!! I've tried to fly a few homemade rockets using flash powder! Failures were loud or way out of control! That was the one that incinerated the tail sick on the ground! The rocket body found its way into a 2 inch open window gap and it ruined the spaghetti sauce!!
Thanks for the spce memories. But, better have your bags packed for Boca Chica. It'll take a while to get the Martian base back up to speed before 33 engine test.
The DART mission was the most impactful.
NASA knocked the mission out of the orbit of this one
Truly a striking achievement.
That’s a blunt statement. How come nobody invites DART to their party? DART will just crash it anyway! 🥴
I c wut u did there
Nice
Can’t wait for the GRAMMYS level Astro Awards in 30 years after space industrialization has come into full swing.
I want a 10 minute roast of Boeing as an opening monologue.
I hope so. We need to idolize astronauts and engineers rather than instagram influencers.
And everyday astronaut is well positioned to take that lead ball. More gala! Collab with airrack? :D
Which Is More Prestigious:- The Grammy's OR The Oscars???🤔
@@AndrewHillis_2024 currently? I'd say a turd on the bottom of your shoe.
First award should go to you!! For educating and making us aware of all the space developments. Thank you! Please continue what you do
The JWST is the biggest one in my book. There are so many mysteries in the universe, and hopefully it will begin to give us some answers
It will give us all more new mysteries than answers
It is naturally. expanding the area of the known, we are confronted with an ever greater space of the unknown
I love this every year. Doesn't get more "Team Space" than taking time each year to celebrate the accomplishments and milestones achieved.
Best of luck for Dearmoon.
I think you are the most desiring candidate for this .
Watching you since four years now .
Great content. Your description of rocket engines are the most clear on UA-cam . Thank you so much. Keep up this great work.
Not just a candidate :)
DART and the JWST (to me) is Science Fiction come to life. It's a strange feeling that something this awesome actually exists. In our time, it can feel like everything possible is already done and there is nothing truly new. But there is a whole literal universe out there full of possibilities. Missions like these are proof that humanity is just at the starting line of a marathon
Its been so great watching this channel grow, and being able to join you on this journey has been a real treat. Thanks Tim :)
Yes! Great channel Tim. I can't wait to follow you to the moon. Your excitement and enthusiasm are contagious and make your videos a treat to watch.
What made 2022 for me was hearing Tim will be flying around the moon. I think that made the mission so much more interesting for me. I am looking forward to all the updates!
Agreed that one is beyond epic. The whole mission premis in really fantastic and to see Him get included is a beyond Huge.
Thanks for the show. It is great to reflect on these scientific achivments and honor the folks behind them. Also, you forgot honorable mention Joe Barnard for successfully retropulsivly landing a amateur rocket!!
Another awesome video, the difference between your videos, and other people videos are that it seems like you really enjoy the content and you put your real emotions into it, and very excited about the content. thanks for another awesome video, you are never negative, and always find the positive in every situation, we need more people like you, Thanks Tim have a fantastic remarkable year, you deserve it.
Just a correction. The communication with the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) was lost in April 2022 and was confirmed by ISRO officials in September 2022. So technically the lifetime of MOM should be from 27 September 2014 to 4 April 2022.
doesn't matter it far exceeded its expected lifetime.
yeah , ISRO don't reveal the details quickly.....
So excited to see a Canadian go to the moon on Artemis 2!! Congrats on the dear moon announcement Tim! You’ve inspired me and I wanted to say thank you for all that you do!
Tim deserves an Astro award for all the work that led him to be nominated to get shot into space.
SpaceX should have gotten another AstroAward, not for a specific launch but for the cadence of launches! More than one launch every 6 days! Absolutely Impressive!
No impressive enough to be in the top 8.
Tim my friend you’re certainly space’s #1 hypeman. Thanks for the being you are ~Smile oN
Here’s to a 2Mil 2023
Let’s GrOOOOOOw
Thank you Tim Dodd!
For continuing to inspire after so many years of doing what you do.
For continuing to stay out of politics in such a divided time. And continuing to unite us around our humanity.
For being open and honest and cheerful about your "merican bias" while also celebrating across the arbitrary boundaries that separate us as humans.
I don't believe that what you do is an easy thing to do. And you do it so well! Keep up your amazing craft. So much love and respect.
Love the channel, love the enthusiasm.
Yay, forget the Oscars and the Golden Globes, the Astro Awards is the one I look forward to every year. :-)
That's because it's a meaningful award given for meaningful accomplishment.
@@odysseusrex5908 lol, probably more true then it should be.
'THE ASTRO AWARDS!!!' WHAT A GREAT IDEA!!!👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Well done. I was fortunate to see the first moon landing, got to play with some aerospace stuff, and still get a thrill from it all. Can't see as sharply as when I was a boy, but still keep looking up in awe. Always smile and stop to appreciate the moon and the visible planets, feels funny to have been gawking at them for almost 60 years.
I have noticed one thing about the way Tim talks about Starship. In the past he would occasionally say phrases like, “assuming Starship works“ or other qualifying statements that encompass the possibility that Starship might not work. But since he has been chosen for the Dear-Moon mission, I’ve noticed that he has dropped using the qualifiers that encompass a possibility of non-success. This has made me wonder if it is part of his Dear-Moon contract to only state that Starship will be successful, or if he made a choice to put “good vibes out to the universe“. I guess a realistic third option would also be that perhaps he knows things that the rest of us don’t, and he knows that Starship will almost certainly work.
I’ve only made two videos since the announcement, and both of them were reflecting on a relatively lack luster year for Starship. I’ve actually rarely doubted starship will work in the long term and always tried to express some level of cautious optimism knowing the first flights will be risky, failure prone. I have no doubt that Starship will work long term dude to the momentum and progress already made. It might have to scale down or be less ambitious from the original design goals for reusability or something, but yeah. I’m free to still express my opinions, fear not. However I am likely projecting a bit more success in the program knowing my life will literally be on the line now at some point.
@@EverydayAstronaut Thanks for the reply Tim. Of course we are all very excited for you, if not occasionally just a wee bit jealous. We will be putting out the best of thoughts for the success of Starship and for you on the upcoming great adventure. I am glad to hear that positivity in the Starship endeavor is not part of some behind the scenes contract. Hearing your unfettered opinions and enthusiasm is one of the best parts of your channel.
@@EverydayAstronaut Ah, Tim. Goals, not Goal's.
Elon Musk:
"Success is a possible outcome."
DART was pretty stinking cool. Also any time the falcon boosters come back to land is always a 10/10
Man, what a year it’s been! Can’t wait to see what 2023 has in store for spaceflight!
Starship!!!
Thanks Again and CONGRATULATIONS Tim!!! 💯❤️☺️🌎🚀💫🌒✨☀️
Thanks Tim. I recommend contacting Adam Savage (Tested/Myth Busters) who loves space to make awards(models)
I love the award show music, it fits the style perfectly, as do the ~streamers coming down the screen.
Those artemis shots are off the charts!
I do believe that DART exceeded expectations by hitting the fully predicted level of change. I think the ejecta might have even given it a small boost. The expectation was that DART would underperform, though it wasn’t known by how much. To see it be so effective was far above expectations.
Hey Tim! Small oops: in first Hubble vs Webb image, both images are from Webb (different wavelengths). You can tell by the diffraction spikes.
The music hook up with the impact at 0:46! a delight Tim🤭 always!
I was at the Artemis launch. Breath taking! But for me, JWST knocked it out of the park by miles.
Thank you Tim for everytihng what You done (and do) for us, ordinary people.
looking forward to your vids for 2023 to infinity and beyond
can't wait for the dear moon mission winning an astro award in a future episode, because it will.
I'm patiently waiting for the astro awards with awards... maybe next year :D great picks, hopefully 2023 will make it even harder for you to pick the winners
Did me & all my friends watching this (just me) mention I love these updates..
Please do more (like one every quarter year).
Love from Amsterdam!
Wow, 2022 so fast! It's feel like AstroAward 2021 just uploaded yesterday!
Spot on with every award, thank you for all you do Tim!
Thank you for your great job of popularising space and rocket science!
Tim always nice to see you! 😊😊😊❤ As far as your being chosen! Well good for you! It is your child like sincerity and honest nature that make you perfect for this. I pray that you don't have too long to wait....😅😊
Well done, Tim. That was an awesome summary.
This has been the best video I have ever seen in years, thanks for all the news :)
2023 is gonna be even more exciting for us as space-fans
🚀Thanks Tim, and Thanks to your Members that helped and Continue to help you keep us Informed💌🌛🧑🚀
Starliner should have received the 'most improved' award
The intro music was impressive 👍
@Tim Dodd You are very good at making these videos. You obviously put a lot of effort into them and there is no sloppy hand-waving like many other UA-cam videos. Thank you for that! I can't think of a better person to be sent around the moon! Big congratulations on that!
Awsome, I completely agree on the 3 top spots, you did really a good job narrating all of them.
Too add the the Firefly hype, they hav the best name and best Paint job. That rocket look so cool.
Dearmoon looks so cool, remember to have fun!
Great video, loved the remembrance of pioneers that passed away. Such a great way to honor their work.
This premier was GREAT! Nice work Tim! Keep em' coming!
You should do more UA-cam videos. I had forgotten how good you are at them.
Well thank you! We’re working on some as we speak don’t worry! The reason they’re so good is because they take a long time to make them good!
Excellent content Tim, thanks.
Such a great way to review the year in space. Your positivity always lifts up the rest of us. (Calling Starliner's flight very successful was pressing things a bit, but OK, it gets carried along with the rest.) I didn't fail to notice that sorting through all of the suggestions and wringing out your own judgments took *a lot* of work. Thank you!
The whole appearance and tone of your show has a certain sophistication. And kudos to your team, finding and putting together the right clips took lots of time and judgment, I'm sure.
Great show and again congratulations on the moon trip
Starliner did complete most if not all mission goals so yes it was very succesfull considering OFT-1.
@@MartinTheGhost To me there's a significant difference between mostly successful and very successful. The problem with the thrusters during the flight was very disturbing. If it happened by itself, then OK, the backup system worked. But there was a big problem on the ground with the sticking valves in the thrusters that delayed the launch for many months while NASA and Boeing worked out the problem and the solution. For there to be a problem in flight after all that is pretty bad. IIRC the in-flight problem occurred in a different type of thrusters but I have no doubt an intense spotlight was on reviewing *all* of the thrusters. That spotlight failed???
It's not just one problem or another. It's that the type of failures on OFT-1 revealed deep levels of poor engineering decisions and management at Boeing. That required a long review with NASA. After all that there was still the problem with the sticking thruster valves. More review. After all that, there was yet another, different inflight thruster problem. Considering the history, OFT-2 earned close scrutiny.
If that last thruster problem was the single problem on OFT-1 then it wouldn't have been a big deal. For it to occur on OFT-2, with all that history, means I my threshold for success is high. Successful, OK. Very successful - no.
Yes, Tim's presentation quality is second to none.
Awesome episode, thank you!
"YES I AM BIASED, BUT THIS IS MY SHOW, DEAL WITH IT!" Man you a savage 🤣
Hubble images next to JWST serves to remind us just how good Hubble still is!
Has there been news on why Dart was so much more succesfull than expected? Was Didymoon (Dimorphos) lighter than expected, more solid or what? I would assume lighter since we knew exactly how much energy would be impacting it.
Space IS the coolest place OFF earth. Thanks Tim and your whole team. Lotsa love from Toronto.
Another awesome Astro Awards! This is a polished and fun video! Great job as always, Tim! Can't wait for more content!
That was an incredible year * tears *
Thanks for putting this all together. Really enjoyed video and really helped update Me on events and passings this last year. Looking forwars to more. Thx!
when you realize 2022 could be the one and ONLY year in human history where we as a species got a 100% successful rocket landing rate
Great stuff Tim! Looking forward to following along with your space flight training.
I think artemis
Maybe 😁
My favourite was NASA's rocket around the moon followed by DART & Fire - fay's successful launch & not forgetting Spacex incredible Falcon 9 success. Great show & many more in the New Year. Slainte Tim you do a great job & congrats. on going to the moon, your a braver man than me. Never catch me on a rocket, no way but worth mentioning your Dear Moon Project.
Hello Tim, good to hear from you. 👍
Tim...Dude, you won the Astro award of the year. You will soon 'Boldly go where no common man has gone before.'
Great presentation!!🎉🎉
This is totally amazing stuff!! Rocket Science Rules!!
R. I. P.
Eugene Parker (June 10, 1927-March 15, 2022)
Bjarni Tryggvason (September 21, 1945-April 5, 2022)
Valery Ryumin (August 16, 1939-June 6, 2022)
Don Lind (May 18, 1930-August 30, 2022)
Frank Drake (May 28, 1930-September 2, 2022)
Valeri Polyakov (April 27, 1942-September 7, 2022)
Maarten Schmidt (December 28, 1929-September 17, 2022)
James McDivitt (June 10, 1929-October 13, 2022)
Joseph Kittinger (July 27, 1928-December 9, 2022)
Miroslaw Hermaszewski (September 15, 1941-December 12, 2022)
25:35 No mention of the Red Team that just an hour or two before launch fixed that one last hydrogen leak under that huge fully-loaded ready-to-go rocket? There's more to the video, I'm hoping they at least get honorable mention as Heroes Of The Year!
I legit it can't wait to see you on the dear mood mission that's gonna be so cool.👍
You should make the awards the a not-a-coaster designed for each specific award you invent.
What a year, thanks for the coverage! Would have loved to see Tiangong covered as well. Politics aside: Amazing success worth mentioning :)
That was great; thanks Tim!! Congratulations to NASA as well, especially as regards to the JWST; what an incredible achievement to get it up and working properly 👍👍
Can't wait to see you among the stars, Tim! Next year, you'll be on your Astro Award yourself!!
I am very excited for Artemis 2
That SLS launch was the best looking night launch ever.
At first it was a little sad hearing it would be a night launch but honestly, seeing how much it lit up the sky, I couldn’t be happier with that launch
Great as always, your Videos, but most importantly Space adventures.
Tho, I would have loved the Catch from Rocketlab to be mentioned somewhere, yes it wasn't a catch without touching water, but still. Hope it will be in the 2023 Awards.
Best of luck to all these amazing People, Companies and Missions in the Space Industrie, Love to see this exiting Future.
Thank you. This cheered me up some.
Heck ya, all good, thanks for putting this together.
Kind of blows my mind to think about that the last few of the Apollo astronauts (allegedly) left the Moon the week before I was born... I sure hope I'll live to see a permanent Moon Base being established! EDIT also: fingers crossed for some orbital launches from Swedish ground.
I had the opportunity to hear Gen. Hermaszewski speech live in September, a few months before he passed away. He was a great person. His stories were immersing (couldn't find a better word).
I've been very fortunate to have followed the US Space Program from it's beginning and especially all the Moon landings. I really hoping that I'll still be here to witness mankind's return to the Moon.
I wish SOFIA was updated/refunded. I know it was expensive and we have the JW now, but infrared telescopes are really important for finding astroids, and its a beautiful instrument.
I had completely forgotten about the private citizen Crew Dragon flight to the ISS.
Absolutely fantastic recap of 2022.
All real live Rocket Boys!!! I've tried to fly a few homemade rockets using flash powder! Failures were loud or way out of control! That was the one that incinerated the tail sick on the ground! The rocket body found its way into a 2 inch open window gap and it ruined the spaghetti sauce!!
11:44 ROFL @ NASA using the Star Control font, colour, and kerning for their "Mission Control Center" sign! Love seeing this kinda geeky stuff!
Nothing in 2023 will beat the launch of KSP 2
thank you tim.
If only we could put US military budget into peaceful space exploration...
ON the inflatable heat shield, who remembers how Tom Swift Jr. did a variant of that back in the day?
Oh, you grabbed my heart and squeezed it hard by including mr Hermaszewski, thank you.
LAUNCHER ONE:- 6 LAUNCHES, 4 SUCCESSES AND 2 FAILURES NOW!!! IS THIS ROCKET JINXED???😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Tim: "The most expensive satellite ever"
The ISS: "Am I a joke to you"
Haha probably should’ve said single payload 🤓
Bro, you freaking rock-it!
You excited? I'm excited for you. Go get em, Major Tom.
Thanks for the spce memories. But, better have your bags packed for Boca Chica. It'll take a while to get the Martian base back up to speed before 33 engine test.