Artemis II
Artemis II official crew portraitLeft to right: NASA astronauts Christina Koch, Victor Glover, Canadian Space Agency Astronaut Jeremy Hansen, NASA Astronaut Reid Wiseman
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
Unexpectedly,
we watched the launch of Artemis II on Wednesday night. Earlier in the day, we
had turned on the television, having misread the expected launch time in
minutes rather than hours. We decided we would not stay up to watch it, but
somehow we did.
I remember previous manned launches being extremely
exciting. Maybe it was the uncertainty of the process, particularly after the
tragedy of the space shuttle failures, ‘Challenger’ in 1986 and ‘Columbia’ in
2003, each resulting in the deaths of their seven crew members.
Artemis
II is the first mission to take humans out of low Earth orbit since 1972 and
will take them further from Earth than ever before. It is planned to travel beyond
the far ‘dark’ side of the moon, then slip back into the gravitational pull
that will bring it back to earth, the pleasingly called ‘free-return
trajectory.’
Nonetheless,
there are many things that could go wrong during the ten-day mission, and
no-one associated with it will breathe easily until the four crew members have
returned safely.
The launch
was impressive, but not nail-biting – perhaps it was the presenters, who seemed
to lack enthusiasm. However many rocket launches there are, each one is significant
and inspiring. Those who complain that such ventures are vanity projects and
the money could be more usefully used on Earth miss the point that we have
benefitted from the discoveries developed through space exploration.
We speedily
take some such benefits for granted, without realising how they came about. For
example, we have GPS navigation, satellite broadcasting, improvements in MRI
and CT scanning, lightweight prosthetic limbs, water purification,
fire-resistant materials, shock absorption materials used in helmets and car
seats, monitoring storms and wildfires.The most
obvious one is the space blanket, seen wrapped around the shoulders of every
marathon runner at the end of the race, or used in emergencies for accident
victims.
It was developed by NASA in 1964!