Artemis I Mission Highlights

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  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
  • From launch to splashdown, NASA’s Orion spacecraft completed its first deep-space mission with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean, west of Baja California, at 9:40 a.m. PST (12:40 p.m. EST) Sunday. The record-breaking Artemis mission traveled more than 1.4 million miles on a path around the Moon and returned safely to Earth. Splashdown was the final milestone of the Artemis I mission, which began with a successful liftoff of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket Nov. 16, from Launch Pad 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Over the course of 25.5 days, NASA tested Orion in the harsh environment of deep space before flying astronauts on Artemis II. During the mission, Orion performed two lunar flybys, coming within 80 miles of the lunar surface. At its farthest distance during the mission, Orion traveled nearly 270,000 miles from our home planet, more than 1,000 times farther than where the International Space Station orbits Earth, to intentionally stress systems before flying crew. Prior to entering the Earth’s atmosphere, the crew module separated from its service module, which is the spacecraft’s propulsive powerhouse provided by ESA (European Space Agency). During re-entry, Orion endured temperatures of about 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit, half as hot as the surface of the Sun. Within about 20 minutes, Orion slowed from nearly 25,000 mph to about 20 mph for its parachute-assisted splashdown. During the flight test, Orion stayed in space longer than any spacecraft designed for astronauts without docking to a space station. While in a distant lunar orbit, Orion surpassed the record for distance traveled by a spacecraft designed to carry humans, previously set during Apollo 13.
    Select music courtesy of Gothic Storm Publishing

КОМЕНТАРІ • 340

  • @humbleguy4726
    @humbleguy4726 Рік тому +33

    For those who gave their lives so that space exploration may continue, you were never far from our thoughts. A new chapter begins.

    • @mynamemylastname7179
      @mynamemylastname7179 Рік тому

      No one gave up their lives for space 💩 Earth is Flat Space is fake

  • @BlackBuck777
    @BlackBuck777 Рік тому +29

    Watching lift-off reminded me of a shuttle launch I attended. As anyone who has had that experience knows there are really no words adequate to describe the emotions. I wish I had been at the Artemis launch, must have been something else. (Even so - I was right back there.) Well done NASA, after all the trials and tribulations a massive success, and congrats to the many, many contributors.

    • @dougcase7545
      @dougcase7545 Рік тому

      Yes, it does. When those SRMs fire, the vehicle just jumps off the launchpad.

    • @bobbybands1928
      @bobbybands1928 Рік тому

      How do you go about seeing a launch? I’ve never found great info online for how to attend. Id love to see one.

    • @mynamemylastname7179
      @mynamemylastname7179 Рік тому

      Here are some words to adequatly explain it, it is a Blimp. Goes Nowhere but bermuda triangle. Earth is Flat Space is fake.
      deal with it

  • @xmunky-
    @xmunky- Рік тому +7

    that image at 11 minutes is really amazing

  • @jdrailfan391
    @jdrailfan391 Рік тому +54

    All I will say is that I bet Neil is giggling from wherever he is now, at this. I’m sure that if he were here today, he would be the proudest person on the planet.

    • @dondon6634
      @dondon6634 Рік тому +15

      Buzz is still around. I bet he's proud. :-)

    • @roshansri1636
      @roshansri1636 Рік тому +11

      I thank everyone from the Space Race era because it's because of them all of this is possible

    • @zanpsimer7685
      @zanpsimer7685 Рік тому +7

      I’ve been waiting 50 years for this. I was a kid during Apollo missions.

    • @Nautilus1972
      @Nautilus1972 Рік тому +2

      Why? Because we went back to the moon after 50 years of low earth orbit flights? Because we're keeping everything secret? Where are the photos of the dark side?

    • @rntcalkins
      @rntcalkins Рік тому +1

      @@roshansri1636 6:43

  • @DonBurke1
    @DonBurke1 Рік тому +9

    Congratulations on an amazing flight. Many historic images were captured as well.

    • @mynamemylastname7179
      @mynamemylastname7179 Рік тому

      Zero historic images were captured. Earth is Flat Space is Fake 🐒

  • @maynardewm
    @maynardewm Рік тому +2

    Pretty incredible that now we can do this perfectly the first time.

  • @brokensoap1717
    @brokensoap1717 Рік тому +6

    On to Artemis II!
    Slowly but surely

  • @ManaBDew
    @ManaBDew Рік тому +5

    A day to remember our Heroes & families for breakthroughs in space exploration
    🎊 Godspeed sincerely

  • @h2energynow
    @h2energynow Рік тому +5

    Awesome accomplishment, Go NASA and all the teams, suppliers, technitions who made this a reality.

  • @Baqusia
    @Baqusia Рік тому +13

    Thank you NASA scientists! You bring back my faith in to science 🙏 . I was missing the real first perfect photo of the planet we are living on so much! I was so upset that it has been all these years and noone did what you do. Amazing job!

  • @josemariamartindiaz3645
    @josemariamartindiaz3645 Рік тому +3

    Great NASA! for the successful beginning of a new human moon exploration age.

  • @sly2392
    @sly2392 Рік тому +2

    SPECTACULAR. 🚴

  • @Zack-vq8rd
    @Zack-vq8rd Рік тому

    This is incredibly powerful and beautiful……. Exploring the infinite space….. ahhh man this is my DREAM

  • @hparson4729
    @hparson4729 Рік тому +2

    Bravo Artemis!

  • @Good.London
    @Good.London Рік тому +3

    I do believe in this footage but I do find it weird that you can see no stars

    • @c.chouinard3282
      @c.chouinard3282 Рік тому +2

      cameras are calibrate to see the big and very bright objects like the earth, the moon, the ship, but not the stars, they are too fint compare to the moon. Same reason for the pictures of apollo program. Nothing is weird if you take some times to educate your self by reading books or any other source of knowledge.

    • @Good.London
      @Good.London Рік тому +1

      @@c.chouinard3282 I totally get that, I guess it's like when you're in a dark room and someone shines a bright light at you , you then can't see past the bright light

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Рік тому +1

      What is lighting the Earth, the Moon, the spacecraft?
      P S. How many stars can you see at high noon? Hint...the answer is one...

    • @beanboi9156
      @beanboi9156 Рік тому

      simple answer:
      when its day on earth, can you see stars apart from the Sun
      when its night and the Sun is gone we can see them

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      If you live in a place where you can see stars at night try standing under a street lamp you can’t see them anymore. Just a cool little thing you can test at home.

  • @geunii5418
    @geunii5418 Рік тому +3

    Congratulations 👏

  • @UgurK1919
    @UgurK1919 Рік тому +3

    Welcome on Earth

  • @Trestin13
    @Trestin13 Рік тому +2

    It's awesome to see her flying and it not be an animation of lift off. Those graphics can be retired.

  • @vissanuwongsangta205
    @vissanuwongsangta205 Рік тому +1

    Hello NASA and NDASA everyone.🌞🌞🌞🌞🌞🙏

  • @codefk8711
    @codefk8711 Рік тому +38

    Anyone on here that thinks that it's all CGI and that rocket launches are fake, should walk into traffic.

    • @randybaumery5090
      @randybaumery5090 Рік тому +4

      Jump into the ocean and feed the fishes. Hahaha. Society doesn't need them.

    • @markrainford1219
      @markrainford1219 Рік тому +3

      Traffic isn't real either.

    • @BrandonBiden69
      @BrandonBiden69 Рік тому

      Hahahahah wow.. you wish injury or death on people who question what the government agencies tell us. God bless you.
      It’s all CGI anyone who has dug deep into this knows without a shadow of a doubt.
      30B from taxpayers mandatory for some cartoons… that’s what NASA (national aquatic salvage administration) receives from us without choice. Go do some homework cause you’ve clearly done

    • @codefk8711
      @codefk8711 Рік тому +1

      Ahh buddy deleted his comment saying its all CGI. I literally live down the road from where the launches happen, and watch it in person. Go to Cape Canaveral for a launch and walk on from your sheppard 🐑

    • @randybaumery5090
      @randybaumery5090 Рік тому

      @@BrandonBiden69 I question your honesty.

  • @АлександрХорев-с8л

    Many thanks to NASA!!! For these great shots! We don't show anything in Russia!!! Very informative, We love you!

  • @WakandaBabe
    @WakandaBabe Рік тому +3

    What I don't understand is why it has taken so long to land on the moon again. We did it once, technology has soared since then. I don't understand why it has not been done again after all these years.

    • @Armis71
      @Armis71 Рік тому +4

      Vietnam happened, and the desire to beat the Soviets in the space race. All that took a lot of money.
      Be encouraged that man is starting to go to space again. There was no political will in the late 70s and 80s and 90s until just this last decade because of private companies going to space.

    • @GameNationRDF
      @GameNationRDF Рік тому +2

      There isn't any reason to go there unless you are 100% confident that you will be building a base. Sure, studying the moon closely, especially the regolith samples thought us a lot about our planet and solar system but there doesn't seem to be too much to learn left about the moon we don't know already. Of course we are open to surprises but this hasn't created the government spending incentive so far.
      Now that the moon base program has started, there is indeed reason invest in the moon again!

    • @GameNationRDF
      @GameNationRDF Рік тому +1

      @@kimsand53 maybe you'll go one day

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому +1

      @@GameNationRDFyou, me, nobody, is not going to the moon. The moon is not terra firma. The moon is a light in the sky.

    • @WakandaBabe
      @WakandaBabe Рік тому +2

      @@GameNationRDF 🤣Don't bother. Either a troll or someone that thinks the earth is flat 🤣

  • @AndiDuck
    @AndiDuck Рік тому +1

    Wow !

  • @robierobinson4741
    @robierobinson4741 Рік тому

    I've always been in awe of what they've done and what they're continuing to do as far as dpace exploration is concerned I've never been able to fully comprehend the magnitude of what it takes but it makes me wonder what will the future bring about for the human race ☮️

  • @rhushsnr
    @rhushsnr Рік тому

    But space shuttle was emotion💯❤

  • @tasuda9786
    @tasuda9786 Рік тому +1

    Was that the sun at 50,000 to 25,000 feet?

  • @parapendejadas4913
    @parapendejadas4913 Рік тому +3

    Why is the US spending 890 Bil in military weapons while NASA's budget is around 30Bil? ...😔😔😔😔.... not to mention there are places in the country without water and power...😒😒😒

    • @randomaccount6146
      @randomaccount6146 Рік тому

      Because humans will never reach a point of actually trusting each other and having similar goals.

  • @RonnyCoalman
    @RonnyCoalman 7 місяців тому

    BOOSTERS IGNITSGN! That will forever be saved..

  • @Synthesis1979
    @Synthesis1979 Рік тому

    I'm a little confused can anyone help? I was always told the reasons you don't see stars In earth orbit and on the surface of the moon is because the brightness of of both The Moon and Earth Obscures them like lights in a stadium. But at 7:40 they are a lot more distanced. Surely we should be seeing some stars?

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Рік тому

      If you can see the surface of the Earth and Moon, what is providing the lighting?
      Bonus question...when that unidentified light source is directly overhead at high noon, can you see the stars?

    • @Synthesis1979
      @Synthesis1979 Рік тому

      @@codymoe4986 ahh I see.

  • @BruceHarms
    @BruceHarms 11 місяців тому

    Wuhuuuuu!

  • @bobbybands1928
    @bobbybands1928 Рік тому +1

    How did we have better cameras/camera angles back in the 60s with the Apollo program? Wtf were those onboard cameras here? Use go pros!

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому

      They used gopros but they failed halfway through LOL

    • @donutactual8887
      @donutactual8887 Рік тому

      So the thing with using film is it produces amazing images compared to digital cameras. You ever notice how old movies can get re-released and have amazing picture resolution. Politics were also involved in the 60's and nasa was given a lot of money to make the landing happen and would have tried to get the best images and videos possible in order to ensure that politicians believe the money was well spent. Imagine what a politician would think in the 60's and 70's if they approved tens of billions of dollars for nasa and they came back with shitty pictures.

    • @bobbybands1928
      @bobbybands1928 Рік тому

      @@donutactual8887 agreed. But with the camera technology we have today, even low budget cameras should give awesome space images. Funding is big so that should be a priority. Get people interested in space travel.

  • @AlPowers53
    @AlPowers53 Рік тому +1

    Why not send one person?

    • @Logansix
      @Logansix Рік тому +3

      Do you want to fly around the moon in a prototype that hasn't been tested? Tired of life?

    • @procerusgigas
      @procerusgigas Рік тому +1

      Thats the next step.

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Рік тому

      Because NASA hasn't sent a solo mission to space since the Mercury program?

  • @wookiedog
    @wookiedog Рік тому

    Another man on the moon. FknA.

  • @alexalekseev115
    @alexalekseev115 Рік тому +1

    Super!!!!!!!

  • @Life_Is_A...
    @Life_Is_A... Рік тому +3

    "Boosters ignishish"

  • @defenderoFreedom
    @defenderoFreedom Рік тому +1

    So, no landing? 😔

    • @morskojvolk
      @morskojvolk Рік тому +2

      It was an uncrewed test mission.

    • @defenderoFreedom
      @defenderoFreedom Рік тому +1

      @@morskojvolk I hope we have a manned moon landing again

    • @morskojvolk
      @morskojvolk Рік тому

      @@defenderoFreedom I'm sure we will!

    • @SadmanProduction
      @SadmanProduction Рік тому +1

      Artemis 3 will be when the landings happen

  • @MIXmastaS7evin
    @MIXmastaS7evin Рік тому

    Any idea what the red glow at the center top of the screen at 13:30 could be..?

    • @StarshipTrooper
      @StarshipTrooper Рік тому

      probably a lens flare caused by the sun

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      I’m not sure but it’s probably just weird light stuff with the camera.

  • @pmuruga23
    @pmuruga23 Рік тому

    Why was the moon landing not tested?

  • @RickyD1968
    @RickyD1968 Рік тому +2

    Going to the moon and space is very cool but I can not believe after 50 yrs later we are still going to space and the moon in the same way and the same type of rockets ????? In 50 yrs we did not make a better type of space craft that can go to and from space ????????

    • @afoxwithahat7846
      @afoxwithahat7846 Рік тому +3

      I think that's a problem, people have zero idea of what improvement looks like.
      There's barely anything on the inside that is equal to Apollo, and the outside shape is the same because better and better computer simulations keep bringing us back to the same results.
      Any more extreme design requires materials we don't have. Like aerospike engines, rotating detonation engines, and so on and so forth.

    • @Agarwaen
      @Agarwaen Рік тому +1

      there's been no new invention (or really, no new physics to allow for such invention) to make other types of rocket engines.

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому

      It was all bullshit from the beginning

    • @RickyD1968
      @RickyD1968 Рік тому

      @@kimsand53 YEP !!!

    • @afoxwithahat7846
      @afoxwithahat7846 Рік тому

      A new conspiracy has just been born

  • @Congobajer
    @Congobajer Рік тому

    5:27 looks like a DDOS game.

  • @thomengel9720
    @thomengel9720 Рік тому

    If this was an unmanned mission, why were there shots of an astronaut in a chair looking out the front?

  • @salmon3886
    @salmon3886 Рік тому

    Why did you guys stop exploring the ocean and trying to bring us too Mars?

    • @qwertyeet
      @qwertyeet Рік тому

      That’s crazy 😱

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      Because (N)ational (A)eronautics and (S)pace (A)dministration isn’t the guys who explore the ocean. They explore space and mess with planes sometimes.

  • @scottscott6794
    @scottscott6794 Рік тому +1

    How can you orbit the moon at that distance when the moon is roughly hollow?

    • @Lucas_Williamson_Drums
      @Lucas_Williamson_Drums Рік тому

      Explain?

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      You can orbit most things far away as long as you go slow enough and the moon or any large space body for that matter, cannot be hollow as it would cave in on itself because of gravity. The moon has a surface, a core and everything in between.

  • @AndySmith4501
    @AndySmith4501 Рік тому +3

    There are three high-tech mannequins on board Artemis with special equipment designed to test the effects of radiation on the human body. Wait. Didn't real people actually go to the moon several decades ago. WTF

    • @Nakolezestodoly
      @Nakolezestodoly Рік тому

      Nikdy jsme neletěli na Měsíc. Plán JFK byl příliš mimo skutečné schopnosti 20. století.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому +1

      We also put asbestos in everything yes

    • @AndySmith4501
      @AndySmith4501 Рік тому

      @Quetzalcoatl
      But we sent astronauts to the moon and back 50 years ago. We know the effects of radiation. Don't we???
      Also we don't need to send mannequins to space. We can recreate radiation right here on earth

    • @AndySmith4501
      @AndySmith4501 Рік тому

      @Quetzalcoatl
      What outer space tests were conducted to test the effects of shielding and radiation during the apollo program. I mean they knew about the van Allan belts already.

    • @AndySmith4501
      @AndySmith4501 Рік тому

      @Quetzalcoatl
      So basically you're saying they used data collected by unmanned probes and the like, which clearly worked because the astronauts suffered no ill effects. So why all of a sudden to we need to send mannequins into space to assess what we already know

  • @asrara3724
    @asrara3724 Рік тому

    Alhamdulillah Aamiin

  • @SaveHanazuki
    @SaveHanazuki Рік тому +1

    The names of Hanazuki and Kiazuki from the cartoon series Hanazuki: Full of Treasures were placed onboard the Orion spacecraft many months before this historic liftoff. I am glad that this mission was accomplished with the names of the cartoon characters other than the Snoopy plushie and a Shaun the Sheep figure.

  • @osvaldovncar2535
    @osvaldovncar2535 Рік тому +1

    Se a trra faz dois movimentos gira no próprio eixo e dár a volta no sol a lua tem que fazer três movimentos girar no próprio eixo dar a volta na terra e no mesmo tempo dar a volta no sol isso e posiveo vejo coisa errada nesta história aí o eu sou burro mesmo kkkk

  • @ronaldschutt2877
    @ronaldschutt2877 Рік тому +5

    Game over for all flatearthers 🌜

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому

      They are just making up more lies, they will never stop until we exterminate them, earth is round and they can't handle being false

  • @ajeeshhassan3090
    @ajeeshhassan3090 11 місяців тому

    Without baby

  • @drummerdoingstuff5020
    @drummerdoingstuff5020 Рік тому +2

    Where’s all the flat earthers? Lol

    • @YogiTheBearMan
      @YogiTheBearMan Рік тому

      Hopefully they’re tired of the mental gymnastics and have moved on

    • @trendynow1369
      @trendynow1369 Рік тому +1

      Still here. If you think this is proof, you really are desperate for nasa scifi. Cringe

  • @cloudstrife7083
    @cloudstrife7083 Рік тому +1

    society is sick instead of giving millions and millions of dollars to pro athletes cancer researcher or great scientist who push the limit of understanding and human knowledge should receive much more money as grants and others stuffs

    • @GameNationRDF
      @GameNationRDF Рік тому +1

      All of what you just listed get many times more than what NASA gets. I don't get your point, its just another facet of human progress. Just because it doesn't align with your value proposition doesn't mean its useless.

    • @cloudstrife7083
      @cloudstrife7083 Рік тому

      @@GameNationRDF you have to be sick between the ears to somehow think just a second that a soccer/basseball/whatever the sports athletes is worth more to society than some of the leading climate/cancer/hiv/fusion reactor researcher moving humanity forward on the most important things

    • @GameNationRDF
      @GameNationRDF Рік тому

      @@cloudstrife7083 No I agree with you that its more important. I am just saying there will be a LOT of people who disagree with you because their value lies in somewhere else sadly.

    • @cloudstrife7083
      @cloudstrife7083 Рік тому

      @@GameNationRDF sorry if I misunderstood you I speak french but explain further what you mean

    • @donutactual8887
      @donutactual8887 Рік тому

      Let's say hypothetically there's a mass extinction event on earth that kills all humans. If we don't have a settlement on the moon that one day could become mostly self sufficient then humanity would be dead and there wouldn't be any curing cancer because there won't be a person in the first place. A base on the moon could also allow for access to higher concentrations of Helium-3 which could one day allow for commercial fusion power which would be even cleaner than nuclear fission or fossil fuels.

  • @Roughdog86
    @Roughdog86 Рік тому +2

    This is a good launch and test run; however, NASA is utilizing 60s and 70s space technology. This is unacceptable in this day and age. We have congress to thank for all the budget cuts over the years. This year, NASA requested only $26 billion from the federal government. If NASA would like to achieve true greatness, they'll need to request a lot more than $26 billion. A manned mission to MARS is scheduled to launch in the 2030s. NASA will need sufficient funds to make this dream come reality. Nuclear Propulsion is the answer!
    Nuclear Propulsion was in its development stage in the mid 1950s. Budget cuts and the fear of another large scale nuclear explosion halted the project. Nuclear Propulsion will cut the travel time to Mars to 90 days or less. During nuclear propulsion development, there were talks about interplanetary travel and even interstellar travel. Let's face it. Chemical propulsion via rockets is yesterday's space tech and it has its limits.
    Also, entering back to Earth via crew module? I was under the impression that NASA had an upgraded version of this and not something they used since the Apollo missions. This mission costed billions to achieve but I cannot help that we've stagnated due to budget cuts. Unless NASA develops new tech, we're not leaving this planet. Ask for more money.

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому +1

      We need a president that will care about space, we need a new JFK but without the mind-blowing

  • @Truthseeker1515
    @Truthseeker1515 Рік тому

    What is disappointing is the use of 1930s fossil-fuel propulsion technology. After all these years, I would have thought we would have come up with an alternative....

    • @morskojvolk
      @morskojvolk Рік тому

      Hydrogen is not a fossil fuel.

    • @gabrieldarcy1744
      @gabrieldarcy1744 Рік тому

      ​@@morskojvolk well the hydrogen and oxidizer fuel still has a water-vapour exhaust, which is a greenhouse gas.

    • @morskojvolk
      @morskojvolk Рік тому +1

      @@gabrieldarcy1744 Um, no, it's not. It's...water.

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Рік тому

      Hydrogen and oxygen are fossil fuels?
      Or were you referring to the solid fuel in the SRBs?

    • @beanboi9156
      @beanboi9156 Рік тому

      unless you mean the SRB's then you seriously do not know your chemicals

  • @levirivard1922
    @levirivard1922 Рік тому +3

    wait. so your telling me they didnt even land on the moon? what was even the whole point of all this?!

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому +1

      They are yanking your chain

    • @teresaa96289
      @teresaa96289 Рік тому +3

      Testing prior to a crewed mission.

    • @radar_radar
      @radar_radar Рік тому

      Its called propaganda mate.

    • @Alistair-gi3bx
      @Alistair-gi3bx Рік тому +1

      No one has been to the moon in like 50 years, they had to test the route with up to date technology, it took readings along the way and the capsule was pressurized to confirm that equipment can sustain a crew.

    • @T1000-s4j
      @T1000-s4j Рік тому +1

      Who told you they went to land? The mission was to test the technology and systems before sending a crew.

  • @warrenmccormackjnr4813
    @warrenmccormackjnr4813 Рік тому

    er nasa there are like 2 volcanoes in papau new guniea right now ready for mining

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      They don’t do mines they do rockets

  • @Thematrix078
    @Thematrix078 Рік тому

    Why does it look so fake?

    • @Draedoon
      @Draedoon Рік тому

      Probably because you forgot to put on your glasses, your vision right now is as clouded as your mind is with all the conspiracy bullshit bottled up in there

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      Because all the “fake” images are real and when they look the same they look the same.

  • @trendynow1369
    @trendynow1369 Рік тому +3

    This is faker than a $3 bill. Cmon people, i know you want hope in your precious scifi, but you really going to believe this crap? Cmon...

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому +2

      Your ignorance of science, history, and evidence-based reasoning is quite apparent in the comments you have posted on this video. I suggest you take some time to educate yourself on the facts and evidence associated with space exploration and the Moon landing before making further baseless comments about a significant moment in history.

    • @trendynow1369
      @trendynow1369 Рік тому +3

      @@strawwagen no one has or will go to the moon.
      Again, enjoy your scifi dreams. Your religion is scientism

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому +1

      ​​@@trendynow1369 no argument? Believe your stupid religion and brainwashing conspiracy propaganda but leave us normal people out of it

    • @reggintoggaf7140
      @reggintoggaf7140 Рік тому

      @@strawwagen your ad hominem makes the whole prospect of men on the moon fake and dumb and gay

    • @randomaccount6146
      @randomaccount6146 Рік тому +2

      @@trendynow1369 I know you don't think this was real. But I'm curious can you at least concede on the possibility of reaching the Moon if you take into consideration our current technology, knowledge about orbital mechanics and knowledge of the parameters of the Earth and the Moon ? And if not do you at least believe that we can take an object really high up and then keep it from falling back by accelerating it parralel to the Earth so that it keeps missing the surface ? I'm just curious about which part you think is sci - fi.

  • @russ2991
    @russ2991 Рік тому +2

    I come just to hear the cringe-worthy slogans at take off and landing.

  • @dblocdupree8478
    @dblocdupree8478 Рік тому +3

    Cannot leave low orbit, nice black out and animation while entering back into Earth's atmosphere, I wonder y this wasn't a consistent live feed

    • @procerusgigas
      @procerusgigas Рік тому +1

      Came to comment section looking for retards, wasnt dissapointed. XD

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому +3

      Your comments are uninformed and unhelpful. Please take your baseless conspiracy theories elsewhere.

    • @fridgeburns
      @fridgeburns Рік тому +1

      This is a highlights video lmao, it was all livestreamed

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      The plasma blocks all radio transmissions between ship and ground. That’s why

  • @archovy
    @archovy Рік тому

    The only reason were going is for the minerals the chinese are ahead of us

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому

      I Wana eat the moon rock

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      @@O5-hansMe too. They say it tastes like crackers

  • @Soluchi-InfiniteCoCreatorGod
    @Soluchi-InfiniteCoCreatorGod Рік тому +5

    Nice CGI. The Moon is not a Rock. None of this will make it into 4th Density. 💯

    • @God0fGambler
      @God0fGambler Рік тому +2

      Ok mj

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому +2

      CGI isn’t all that great. Oh my, what people believe is real………..

    • @michaelclentworth1283
      @michaelclentworth1283 Рік тому

      @@kimsand53 That's great, coming from someone who clearly has no brain.

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому +1

      @@michaelclentworth1283 anyone with a brain would know that no one has been to the moon

    • @Logansix
      @Logansix Рік тому +3

      ​@@kimsand53 No. With reason, you know exactly that you have been to the moon. The evidence is irrefutable.

  • @YourGrace82
    @YourGrace82 Рік тому

    So, what do we have? The United States declares itself the only space hegemon, and assigns itself the role of managing the entire outer space. Those countries who are ready to recognize their authority and obey, they will allow space exploration within the limits allowed by the United States. And they will even help them a little, if the role assigned to them requires it, and correspond to the interests of the United States. And to those who disagree with this state of affairs, the United States actually declares a space war. This is what they call: the Artemis program. Russia and China have already been declared enemies in advance, and a law has been passed on countering and prohibiting cooperation between the Russian and Chinese space programs. That is, the United States professes the principle: who is not with us, is against us! And as we can see, this is their approach in everything, whether it's water, land, sky, or space. I'm afraid that with this approach, sooner or later, they will no longer start a cold war, which is already underway, but will unleash a full-fledged third World war.

  • @radar_radar
    @radar_radar Рік тому +1

    Hahaha funny.

  • @peterlutz7191
    @peterlutz7191 Рік тому +70

    I was a young boy when we had the Mercury and Gemini programs, then a teen and young man during the Apollo moon Program, then the STS program, I'm so glad that FINALLY we are doing some serious space exploration again! Well done! A near flawless mission.

    • @brianfoss571
      @brianfoss571 Рік тому +8

      Spirit and Opportunity, Curiosity and Perseverance, Cassini and Galileo - those are serious space exploration missions, too. They just don't get as much attention from the general public because they don't have people onboard. And the 180+ day missions on ISS have taught us much more about surviving a trip to Mars and back than anything in Apollo did.
      Just because flags and footprints aren't involved doesn't mean it's not "serious space exploration."

    • @sclyse
      @sclyse Рік тому

      @@brianfoss571 -Brian Foss 2022

    • @afoxwithahat7846
      @afoxwithahat7846 Рік тому

      @@sclyse and he's absolutely correct

    • @BrandonBiden69
      @BrandonBiden69 Рік тому

      We aren’t doing anything but lying to the masses for 30B/year we are forced to pay. How are humans so mailable?

    • @maskonfilteroff3145
      @maskonfilteroff3145 Рік тому

      @@BrandonBiden69 Well, if we'd stop slapping postage stamps all over each other...

  • @ejicon3099
    @ejicon3099 Рік тому +8

    Beautiful recap. EXCELLENT WORK by everyone who was involved in this project/mission.

  • @blackefeltsch7459
    @blackefeltsch7459 Рік тому +6

    The perspective at 6:50 somehow terrifies me. Seeing the Earth in the bottom right corner so small compared to the moon yet so close but so tremendously far away. I don't know.
    Being able to see it in front of you as if it's right in front of you but actually it's unreachable. Scary.

  • @pinoylowbudgetproductions7290
    @pinoylowbudgetproductions7290 Рік тому +4

    Love that Carl Sagan Reference at 11:40. Now I am gonna listen to the Pale Blue dot over and over again❤

  • @SuperSalazar94
    @SuperSalazar94 Рік тому +2

    boy fumbled them words he so excited

  • @GhostRyder2008
    @GhostRyder2008 Рік тому +4

    Flat-earthers be like "These images are doctored up to make it look like Earth is round!"

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому

      The earth is actually a massive donut.
      They had to warp the footage, you can see it in the pixels.

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому

      ​@@strawwagen lol

  • @stefanlennartsson9860
    @stefanlennartsson9860 Рік тому +2

    To the future!

  • @davegoodridge8352
    @davegoodridge8352 Рік тому +7

    Was there a atmosphere maintained the entire flight inside Orion that could have kept a person alive?

    • @stragnetsmith2686
      @stragnetsmith2686 Рік тому +1

      no it was unmanned

    • @gatrixz
      @gatrixz Рік тому

      The mission was uncrewed

    • @paulconn3184
      @paulconn3184 Рік тому +7

      Good question... I presume you mean... even though it was unmanned, was atmosphere maintained for testing purposes?

    • @kellanroberts2785
      @kellanroberts2785 Рік тому +3

      @@stragnetsmith2686not what he was asking

    • @drummerdoingstuff5020
      @drummerdoingstuff5020 Рік тому

      @@kellanroberts2785 he answered and gave the reason why.

  • @Gilmore304
    @Gilmore304 Рік тому +1

    You can clearly see that either meteor showers or some form of rock has hit the moon who knows when but can Guarantee we will experience the same at some point

    • @markrainford1219
      @markrainford1219 Рік тому +2

      We already do, on a daily basis.

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      @@markrainford1219Yeah the moon just doesn’t have an atmosphere to delete the meteors so they all hit.

  • @mrjosephDJ
    @mrjosephDJ Рік тому

    The earth doesn't look flat to me..

  • @CatalinElton
    @CatalinElton Рік тому

    Please, please tell me if I got the attitudes right:
    1. Outbound Powered Flyby burn: Posigrade burn (opposite of Apollo) nose of spacecraft pointing forward.
    2. Distant Retrograde insertion burn: Posigrade burn, nose of spacecraft pointing forward, to raise the Perilune.
    3. Distant Retrograde orbit exit burn: Retrograde burn, nose of spacecraft pointing in the opposite direction of flight, to lower the Perilune and fly by close to the Moon.
    4. Powered Return Fly By: Posigrade burn, nose of spacecraft pointing into direction of flight (Apollo like).
    Many anymations but almost none correlate spacecraft attitude of burn with trajectory and orbit change
    Please tell me if I got them right.

  • @mysacrament210
    @mysacrament210 7 місяців тому

    Going nowhere since 1958 🎉

  • @jameswinburn6843
    @jameswinburn6843 Рік тому

    I remember the moon missions and my excitement that man was finally a spacefaring species. My science fiction addiction was being fed. I imagined, during Armstrong's moon walk that it would only be a decade or so until we went to Mars and surely, by the end of my life we would see a mission to a nearby star. Such foolish optomism! The truth became clearer during the next five decades: There never was a need to go exploring the solar system by men. At the time of Apollo, we didn't have the ability to study the moon by remote. We almost had to land in order to make sure it wasn't green cheese. Shortly after the Apollo era ended we had developed the ability to send autonomous robots to do the studies. The past five decades saw remote missions to a comet and an asteroid! Now, we've consolodated our knowledge and abilities and can return to do the things that robots can't. Maybe future robots will make man obsolete again but until that time we have a chance to dispurse mankind. This may be the way we always work, inchworming along, first with probes and then with men. Our first missions to the stars will be probes so advanced we can't conceive of them now. I curse the shortness of human life. I'd like to see the next steps. The moon is two years away, Mars, ten. I can make it that far. Pray.

  • @ritsakara3476
    @ritsakara3476 7 місяців тому

    Or chasing satellites?????

  • @ritsakara3476
    @ritsakara3476 7 місяців тому

    Artemis can see from the moon

  • @RiTorpedo
    @RiTorpedo Рік тому +1

    Which engines are on this rockets? RD series?

    • @Agarwaen
      @Agarwaen Рік тому

      no. they're literally using the same engines as on the space shuttle.

    • @RiTorpedo
      @RiTorpedo Рік тому

      @@Agarwaen thanks mate..it means they are using RS-25 Pratt & Whitney..good

  • @warrenmccormackjnr4813
    @warrenmccormackjnr4813 Рік тому

    and the fuel line for the thing was fixed by me with tape

  • @defenderoFreedom
    @defenderoFreedom Рік тому

    It's ok. Still cool that we return to the lunar orbit

  • @wookiedog
    @wookiedog Рік тому

    Amazing, incredible wow.

  • @valerijzviozdkin9351
    @valerijzviozdkin9351 Рік тому

    Hm,you could make inhabited station at geosynchronic orbit,at 30000 kilometers high.Could be the best an investment for million years:)

    • @qwertyeet
      @qwertyeet Рік тому

      NASA has plans to make a lunar space station in the late 2020s for the future Artemis programs

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      @@qwertyeetnext year is the start (hopefully)

  • @tmbv2884
    @tmbv2884 Рік тому +4

    Why don't you show where Apollo landed? You are there, it is important to show this work. This issue has been discussed for 50 years.

    • @apocalips8008
      @apocalips8008 Рік тому +8

      its been done many times over many years... check out LRO...

    • @Logansix
      @Logansix Рік тому +2

      Why try to do that? That's not what this is about. The orbit was too high for that, too. And there are many pictures from the moon orbiters.

    • @procerusgigas
      @procerusgigas Рік тому +1

      It hasn't been discussed, the fact that you and your echo chamber belive it was a fake doesnt mean it is a controversial topic.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Рік тому

      Are you serious? Go educate yourself on the subject, it's not our responsibility to prove the moon landing happened. We don't have 50 years to waste on this. Just Google it.

  • @johnjohn-br9bz
    @johnjohn-br9bz Рік тому +1

    lol

  • @dblocdupree8478
    @dblocdupree8478 Рік тому +3

    This is so cap

  • @AN-ce1nd
    @AN-ce1nd Рік тому +6

    Unbelievable studio editing! Almost looks real!

    • @kimsand53
      @kimsand53 Рік тому +1

      Not really

    • @trendynow1369
      @trendynow1369 Рік тому +1

      @@kimsand53 😂
      For real. Looks so fake, only the hopeless scifi freaks think this is real

    • @O5-hans
      @O5-hans Рік тому

      ​@@trendynow1369 how

    • @trendynow1369
      @trendynow1369 Рік тому

      @@O5-hans how you're a hopeless sci-fi freak? Idk how you got to this point

    • @TornadoAlert829
      @TornadoAlert829 Рік тому +1

      It is real

  • @Nautilus1972
    @Nautilus1972 Рік тому +1

    They've had a long time to scrub all the video and photos of alien bases.

    • @markrainford1219
      @markrainford1219 Рік тому +1

      Don't need to, they're invisible.

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Рік тому

      @@markrainford1219so invisible that they don’t exist

  • @samuraj6722
    @samuraj6722 Рік тому +2

    BRAVO NASA

  • @sketchjennings3878
    @sketchjennings3878 Рік тому +1

    Well done. Faith restored. Keep that up.