NASA has finally taken its first small step toward sending humans back to the Moon.
The Space Launch System (SLS) lifted off into Florida's early morning sky today at 1:47 A.M. EST. The massive rocket lofted the uncrewed Artemis 1 mission on a 25-day flight to the Moon, carrying with it NASA’s hopes for human deep-space exploration — from the upcoming return of astronauts to the lunar surface to our eventual first steps on Mars.
Taller than the Statue of Liberty, the SLS rose into a Florida sky that hasn’t seen the likes of such an impressive launch since 1972. That’s when Apollo 17’s Saturn V took humans to the Moon for the last time. With 8.8 million pounds of thrust, the SLS is 15 percent more powerful than the Saturn V, meaning the SLS now holds the record for the most powerful rocket ever successfully launched.
Its thrust is equivalent to nearly all the train engines in the U.S. running at once — some 25,000 of them — according to NASA. Only the Soviet N-1, meant to compete with Apollo’s Saturn V, had more thrust (some 10 million pounds), but it blew up four times.
The Orion capsule atop the SLS core stage is the first human-rated deep-space capsule to fly toward the Moon in 50 years. It is intended to go farther than any such craft, reaching some 280,000 miles (450,000 kilometers) from Earth on a distant retrograde orbit.
If all goes to plan, Orion will reach the far point of its orbit 40,000 miles (64,000 km) beyond the Moon’s farside — beating the previous distance record-holder of Apollo 13. At its closest approach, Orion will be just 60 miles (100 km) above the dramatic lunar surface.
At the end of its trip, Orion’s odometer will read about 1.3 million miles (2.1 million km). When it’s done clocking those, the capsule will return to Earth at speeds up to 24,500 mph (39,400 km/h), reaching temperatures of 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,700 degrees Celsius) as it reenters Earth’s atmosphere. That’s faster and hotter than any prior spacecraft.
The mission “is a test flight…It’s not without risks…We are stressing Orion beyond what it was designed for,” said Bob Cabana, NASA Associate Administrator, warning that the flight might “come home early.”
Artemis 1 begins a long lunar journey
The lift-off took place at storied Launch Pad 39B, which has hosted one Saturn V launch for Apollo 10, and four Saturn 1B missions for Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz. Prior to launch, the rocket was dramatically lit by spotlights.
The countdown and fueling went smoothly until a small core-stage hydrogen leak forced a crew of technicians to go to the pad to tighten a valve on the mobile launcher. The fix worked thanks to a three-person team that ventured into what’s called “the blast danger zone.” In another hiccup, a radar site needed to monitor the eastern launch range then went dark due to a faulty ethernet switch. Fortunately, the switch was repaired in time for the launch.
At 1:33 A.M. EST, NASA announced “no constraints” to launch, and a subsequent readiness poll at Mission Control was a go for launch. The final 10 minutes of the countdown soon resumed. Shortly before launch, plumes of water vapor were shed from the rocket like exhaled breath until just before lift-off, which is normal.