Artemis 2 is NASA's first crewed flight test of the Artemis program, carrying four astronauts (three NASA and one Canadian) aboard the Orion spacecraft to evaluate crew performance and life support systems for future lunar missions; unlike Apollo missions that landed in the equatorial region for sample collection, Artemis missions will land in the lunar South Pole to establish a permanent human presence, with the ultimate goal of preparing for human missions to Mars.
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Deep Dive
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Artemis 2 was just really cool. It's a very big deal. I don't know how you're going to work that in, but Artemis 2 is our [music] first crewed flight test of NASA's Artemis campaign.
So, we had Artemis [music] 1 a couple of years ago. Artemis 1 was uh incredible mission, extremely successful, but there were no humans on board. We had a couple of mannequins on board, [music] and they helped collect data about radiation and vibration inside of the cabin, but it's a very different thing [music] entirely when there are actual human beings on board. The main objective of the Artemis 2 mission is to evaluate the crew performance of the deep space exploration system. And so, huge part of the mission is really [music] evaluating the critical life support systems aboard Orion in order to help prepare us for future [music] Artemis missions that will eventually land people on the moon. We have eye on the horizon for human Martian missions, and so all of the data that we collect during this mission will help prepare us for that eventual giant leap to Mars.
[music] >> 20 m off the surface. There are four astronauts flying aboard Artemis 2, [music] three NASA astronauts, and there is one Canadian Space Agency astronaut.
The spacecraft has a habitable cubic volume of 330 cubic feet. So, that's [music] four people in about two minivans of space. So, it's a little cramped. I think like pretty much every minute of their schedule is accounted for. Artemis 2 will be about 10 days. We have maneuvers that get the spacecraft on the path trajectory it needs to be on. We also have demonstrations aboard the mission. During the lunar flyby, the astronauts will be making lunar observations. Of course, they need time to eat, to rest, [music] to exercise.
Being in weightlessness, it affects bone density and muscle mass. So, it's very important that they all exercise every day. And of course, we have [music] time for them to just relax, right? It's been over 50 years since we've sent human beings to the vicinity of the moon.
There's a lot of differences between now and then. NASA had Apollo missions from 1969 to 1972, and these missions all landed within the equatorial region of the moon, which means like the center of the moon the moon's equator. The Artemis missions will land astronauts [music] in the lunar South Pole region of the moon.
And the objective is pretty different.
With the Apollo missions, we went and we came back. We collected samples, we picked up rocks and soil, we left behind footprints and lunar rovers. But the difference with Artemis missions is that we're really trying to live and work [music] on the moon and build a lunar presence there. We're actually flying around the moon in a totally [music] different way than we did with the Apollo missions. The way that Artemis 2 flies around the moon, we will actually have our astronauts seeing parts of the moon that have never been seen before with human eyes. We've imaged every square inch of the moon, but it's a totally different thing. [music] Eyes are a lot more sensitive to things like shade and tone and color and texture, and so these things can help [music] inform lunar geologists back on Earth.
The mission will actually be taking the astronauts into [music] deep space. So when they fly around the moon, they're flying well beyond the moon and they're flying deeper [music] into space than perhaps we ever have before. We actually set the record for how far human beings have flown away from the Earth during the Apollo 13 mission. Depending on when we launch, those astronauts on Artemis 2 might be breaking that record. As we send [music] astronauts into deep space during this mission, we want to monitor how the deep space [music] environment affects the human body and performance.
And the goal again, as I said, is to help us prepare [music] for future crude missions to Mars. So, all of these long duration missions, these space flights help us collect data on what will be the best way for us to eventually send [music] people to Mars, which is, by the way, a lot farther away from Earth than the moon. So, everything we can do now prepares us for the future.
Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars.
>> [music]
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