NASA Astronauts Bound for Moon in Landmark Return Mission
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7 Articles
The launch of NASA’s Artemis II mission is already history. The SLS rocket, with the Orion spacecraft at its peak, took off yesterday, April 1, at 18:35 Eastern American time (22:35 GMT), from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The countdown stopped briefly 10 minutes after the launch, but the teams resolved the incident and the takeoff occurred smoothly. Shortly thereafter, Orion’s solar panels were properly deployed to start generating power…
Humanity is about to return to the Moon after 50 years. NASA’s Artemis II mission has taken off this 1 April at 18:35 local time in Florida (United States), which translates in the early morning of April 2 at 00:35 hours on the Spanish peninsula. NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen of the CSA (Canadian Space Agency) have departed from the 39B platform of the Kennedy Space Center (Florida) with the Ori…
NASA astronauts bound for moon in landmark return mission
NASA’s four astronauts launched to space Wednesday, kicking off a landmark journey that will take them closer to the lunar surface than anyone has been in more than 50 years. The crew’s Lockheed Martin Corp.-built Orion capsule, stacked on the…
Artemis II astronauts are completing in-orbit checks before heading to the Moon, in a mission that pushes the boundaries of space exploration.
Artemis II is the historic mission of NASA that marks the return of man to the Moon after more than 50 years, where Paraguay enters a name on the crew. Artemis II Mission with Paraguayan presence. Photo: gentle Paraguayan engineer Hernando Gauto, originally from the Jara neighborhood of the city of Asunción, is one of the referents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, better known as NASA. Gauto spoke exclusively with our media …
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