Everything About Crazy Journey of Artemis II to the Moon You Should Know
Автор: Space Zone
Загружено: 2026-01-27
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Everything About Crazy Journey of Artemis II to the Moon You Should Know
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#space #spacezone #spacex #starship
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Everything About Crazy Journey of Artemis II to the Moon You Should Know.
In less than a month, NASA will launch the first mission that sends humans toward the Moon in more than 50 years. And despite how incredible that sounds, many people still don’t really know what this mission is all about. Will it actually land on the Moon? What are its real objectives?
Today, I’ll walk you through exactly what will happen on launch day—because this mission is about far more than just a simple test flight.
Everything About Crazy Journey of Artemis II to the Moon You Should Know
Artemis II is the second mission in NASA’s plan to take humans back to the Moon, with Mars as the bigger long-term goal. It’ll also be the first time in more than 50 years that people actually ride a spacecraft meant to go around the Moon again. Artemis I already proved the basics worked, flying an uncrewed Orion mission for about 25 days and covering roughly 1.4 million miles. This time, though, there’ll be four astronauts on board.
The whole point of Artemis II is pretty simple: put people inside Orion and make sure everything works the way it’s supposed to. That means testing the life-support system for a mission that can last up to three weeks, and checking that the crew can fly the spacecraft manually if something goes wrong. The plan is to start in Earth orbit, test a bunch of systems, then send Orion on a trip around the Moon, about 230,000 miles from Earth, before heading home. If all that goes well, Orion should be ready for Artemis III and an actual lunar landing.
Everything About Crazy Journey of Artemis II to the Moon You Should Know
Based on that, the real star of this mission is definitely the Orion capsule. It’s got four solar panels, each about 23 feet long, sticking out the back like tail feathers. At first glance, Orion looks a lot like Apollo, but it’s way more modern under the hood. The pressure vessel uses a lighter, stronger aluminum alloy, and the outside is covered with about 1,300 heat-resistant tiles, borrowed straight from shuttle-era tech. Inside, Orion has about 330 cubic feet of space—roughly the cargo area of a delivery van, and about 60% more room than Apollo ever had.
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