Free Range Free Chat

Happy Monday all, welcome to Free Range, our Monday Free Chat where we talk about a wide RANGE😉 of topics, whatever interests you, share it with the community, whether it is newsy or chatty, a problem or a solution, or maybe just an idea, feel free to talk about it.

In keeping with our focus on our environment, we offer a reminder of the NASA press briefing today in advance of next week’s Artemis 1 mission. This is the mission which starts looking into long term living on moon and then Mars. Could this be our plan B?

NASA’s historic Artemis 1 mission will launch toward the moon one week from today (Aug. 22), if all goes according to plan.

Artemis-1 Flight Readiness Review Briefing, Mon • Aug 22nd, 2022 6:00 PM CDT NASA will hold a media briefing following the completion of the Artemis 1 Flight Readiness Review. M(https://www.spacelaunchschedule.com/space-events/)

Artemis 1, the first mission in NASA’s Artemis program of lunar exploration, is scheduled to lift off from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center 4 r on Aug. 29 at 8:33 a.m. EDT (1233 GMT). You can watch it live here at Space.com when the time comes, courtesy of NASA.

It will be quite an event, and not just for die-hard space fans. NASA’s webcast “will include celebrity appearances by Jack Black, Chris Evans and Keke Palmer, as well as a special performance of ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ by Josh Grobin and Herbie Hancock,” agency officials wrote in an update on Friday(opens in new tab) (Aug. 19).

Artemis 1 will mark the debut of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) megarocket, which will send an uncrewed Orion capsule to lunar orbit. Orion will spend six weeks in space, finally returning to Earth in an ocean splashdown on Oct. 10.

Sensors inside Orion will gather data on the deep-space radiation environment and other aspects of the flight. And, not long after liftoff, 10 tiny cubesats will deploy from an adapter connecting Orion to the SLS’s upper stage. These little spacecraft will perform a variety of work, from hunting for water ice on the moon to traveling to a near-Earth asteroid using a solar sail.

Artemis I is 5th from the left 6

But the main goal of Artemis 1 is to demonstrate that SLS and Orion are ready to carry astronauts, which the duo will do in relatively short order if Artemis 1 goes well. NASA aims to launch Artemis 2, a crewed mission to lunar orbit, in 2024. Artemis 3 will then put astronauts down near the moon’s south pole in 2025 or 2026, in the first crewed lunar landing since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

Unlike Apollo, Artemis is not designed to be a flags-and-footprints operation.

“We will collaborate with commercial and international partners and establish the first long-term presence on the moon,” NASA’s Artemis page states(opens in new tab). “Then, we will use what we learn on and around the moon to take the next giant leap: sending the first astronauts to Mars

Again Happy Monday, what’s going on in your world? All topics all the time, within reason and sometimes, completely without reason……Whatcha got?

Space.com

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