Artemis

Bay Area Astronomer Talks Upcoming Artemis 1 Launch

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The countdown to takeoff for the Artemis 1 mission is on. A Bay Area Astronomer will be watching Monday’s launch. Christie Smith reports.

The countdown to takeoff for the Artemis 1 mission is on. It's set to launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida Monday morning.

Gerald McKeegan, an astronomer with the Chabot Space & Science Center in Oakland will be watching the launch.

“The idea of this mission is to launch the Orion. Send it out to the moon, put it in orbit, around the moon and eventually, return to earth and test out all the systems be involved, when we eventually send humans back to the moon. Most likely in 2025,” he said.

McKeegan said that NASA had been anxious to get back to the moon and eventually onto Mars for some time.

“The space launch system, which is the largest launch vehicle that NASA has built, on top of it is the Orion capsule, which hopefully will eventually carry astronauts to the moon. But for this mission, the Orion capsule is not crewed. So it's just an empty capsule," he said.

Rob Mayeda has a look how space shuttle-era tech is helping to power up the Artemis 1 launch, from the twin solid rocket boosters, familiar burnt orange center fuel tank, and the former shuttle’s main engines.

NASA officials held another briefing Sunday, as anticipation builds for Monday morning’s launch at the Kennedy Space.

Officials confirmed Sunday that despite lightning strikes to the towers at the launch pad, the mission is on track for the inaugural launch.

Christie Smith has the full story in the video above.

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