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Judi Lynn

(160,516 posts)
Thu Sep 1, 2022, 05:53 AM Sep 2022

Here's How to Track the Orion Spacecraft After the SLS Sends It to the Moon This Weekend

Sep 2022, 08:33 UTC · by Daniel Patrascu

Earlier this week, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket was not that eager to leave Launch Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, so NASA had to postpone the start of humanity’s second lunar exploration program.

As it stands, the launch of Artemis I is now scheduled for 2:17 p.m. EDT on Saturday, September 3. NASA will resume the countdown (it was stopped at T-minus 40 minutes), but only at the opening of a planned 2.5-hour built-in hold.

This second attempt will probably go along the same lines as the first one, with long wait times between exciting stuff happening. But once the SLS gets going, a spectacle of at least solar system proportions will be unleashed, as the uncrewed Orion capsule will start its 1.3 million miles journey and a mission that is expected to last close to 38 days.

To make sure we don’t miss on the exciting stuff that’ll probably happen while Orion is en route, NASA set up a while ago a way to track the thing. Called the Artemis Real-time Orbit Website (AROW), the tool gives the chance to anyone with internet access to see how far the Orion is from Earth at any given time, but also in relation to the Moon.

More:
https://www.autoevolution.com/news/heres-how-to-track-the-orion-spacecraft-after-the-sls-sends-it-to-the-moon-this-weekend-197507.html

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