The New Moon Landing: Beginning The Artemis Program | Zenith | Spark

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Looking into the future of space exploration, the Artemis program will play a big part in taking humans back to the moon, and as a foundation to explore other planets like Mars. What are Artemis's stages, and how will that take us to the moon and beyond?
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Zenith explores the different aspects of space, including the planets, the technologies for us to explore the planets, and the future of space exploration.
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#space #artemis #NASA
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Just had a flashback !
I think I saw this almost 60 years ago !
I'm watching history repeat !

sidstevens
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Although this was just posted, it is a year or more out of date. SpaceX has a contract to begin converting Starship into a heavy Lunar Lander. Virgin Galactic has successfully flown passengers. Cosmic Girl has ferried Launcher One to successful satellite launches. But Boeing’s Starting has yet to have a completely successful mission or be certified to fly astronauts.

jonshellmusic
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If you clicked to actually see something about Artemis then that doesn't start until half way through.

Isawwhatyoudid
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Humans can be so smart... This all seems very complex... So amazing...

AbominableDuck
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This must've first been released at least 4 years ago (2018) so as interesting as it is, for it to have only been uploaded to YouTube in Nov22 just prior to the 16.11 launch of Artemis 1 with Orion already whizzing around somewhere up there, leaves me thinking"Mehhh! Why have ya left it SO long??" 🤯

arniet
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Great! SpaceX can use some competition, so neither one slacks off.

AlexKasper
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When you say "about". Do you have an increment of measurement for "about".

Pensacola-Handyman
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CGI is so much better now should be a really good movie. Moon 2 man in space.

stevenunua
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Well done for someone new to space exploration programs.

philpots
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In 1953 Wernher von Braun wrote in his book "Conquest of the Moon" that, in order to fly to the moon and back would require a rocket that was taller than the Empire State building (1/4 mile high) and a weight of 800, 000 tons.

scott-o
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It's summer 1983. Columbia is on Pad 39A, Artemis 1 is on Pad 39B. Columbia will carry a new space lab into orbit. Artemis 1 will do a Lunar fly by while testing hardware. Artemis 4 will do a manned landing on the Moon on April 1, 1985. Challenger will successfully deploy the Galileo orbital telescope during March 1986. Artemis 6 will deliver the first components of a permanent Lunar surface station during October 1986. At this time NASA will rethink the SeaDragon design and implement its redesign, upgrade and place it into service by December 1990.

derbuckeyetribe
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24:52 OH WOW, take people into space by 2020.... I can hardly wait

lennyf
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This propaganda is amazing 🤩
Cant wait when we can visit the Death Star from star wars, so i can get my hands on the Lunar PC to shut down the 3d matrix’s^^

janisblums
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That was an incredibly in-depth look at the mission. Awesome video!

SiStockbridge
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Why NASA does not want to use tested and proven systems such as falcon 9 and falcon heavy to launch Artemis? I think both platform by SpaceX are qualified or sufficient enough. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

hakhaimo
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Some of the introductory data would bespeak of an old video, as it mentions Virgin Galactic as one that "will expand Space Tourism", among other items

alfonsovicinip.
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Canada is also a partner in the ISS. They developed the Canadarm articulated "crane" for one thing, which has proven invaluable for the construction and repair of the station, and sent several astronauts for duty aboard the station. This seems to be confusingly seldom mentioned by the media. There, of course, will be the usual people who think this sucks anyways. Proud Canadians all.

R.U...
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I'm not even convinced the SLS will fly. And if it is, it's too expensive to use for the multiple missions that will be needed. I foresee NASA ultimately hitching a ride on a Starship.

jonathanrichter
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There are times like this in history worth noting. Example: Navies circa 1941: "We build the biggest and best battleships that ever existed." At the start of WWII: the Aircraft Carrier War. And Legacy Space & SLS: "We can build bigger and the best expendable rocket that ever existed, and it will be built with 1970s technology!" At the start of the next-gen rocketry and rapid re-usability, exponentially cheaper kg-to-orbit phase of manned space exploration.

lawrenceallen
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I'm proud to announce I'm starting a go fund me because I want to be the first human to land on the sun. 🤡

critterfestsanctuary