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Godspeed, Artemis (which is filled with Hornet drivers)

Talyn

Emissary
Founding Member
Commander (Navy Capt.) Reid Wiseman, Pilot (Navy Capt.) Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch from NASA, along with Mission Specialist (RCAF Capt) Jeremy Hansen from the Canadian Space Agency, are set for a 10-day mission around the Moon and back.

It will be the first time Artemis and Orion are on a manned mission.

It will be the largest moon mission in terms of crew, with the Apollo trips having three members.

Although they are just sling-shotting around it and not landing, it will be the first time a spacefaring crew has gone to the moon since Apollo 17 in 1972– back when analog technology and slide rules were standard.

NASA expects that on 6 April, Artemis II will break Apollo 13’s record of 248,655 miles from Earth, making its four humans the furthest-traveled in known history.

Interestingly, three of the four (all but Koch) are F-18 pilots, with both Glover and Wiseman being Naval Aviators who logged combat hours with VFAs from carriers. Meanwhile, Hansen stood QRA with the RCAF’s now-disbanded 441st TFS on NORAD tasking out of Cold Lake. Of note, the RCAF motto is Sic Itur Ad Astra (“Such is the pathway to the stars”), which tracks.

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Successful launch today!

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The woman l
Commander (Navy Capt.) Reid Wiseman, Pilot (Navy Capt.) Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch from NASA, along with Mission Specialist (RCAF Capt) Jeremy Hansen from the Canadian Space Agency, are set for a 10-day mission around the Moon and back.

It will be the first time Artemis and Orion are on a manned mission.

It will be the largest moon mission in terms of crew, with the Apollo trips having three members.

Although they are just sling-shotting around it and not landing, it will be the first time a spacefaring crew has gone to the moon since Apollo 17 in 1972– back when analog technology and slide rules were standard.

NASA expects that on 6 April, Artemis II will break Apollo 13’s record of 248,655 miles from Earth, making its four humans the furthest-traveled in known history.

Interestingly, three of the four (all but Koch) are F-18 pilots, with both Glover and Wiseman being Naval Aviators who logged combat hours with VFAs from carriers. Meanwhile, Hansen stood QRA with the RCAF’s now-disbanded 441st TFS on NORAD tasking out of Cold Lake. Of note, the RCAF motto is Sic Itur Ad Astra (“Such is the pathway to the stars”), which tracks.

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Successful launch today!

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The woman looks like an older Christy McAuliffe.
 
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A view of the Earth from NASA’s Orion spacecraft as it orbits above the planet during the Artemis II test flight. NASA astronauts Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, launched at 6:35 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, on an approximately 10-day mission around the Moon and back to Earth.
NASA
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I don't mean to malign NASA, but Elon is landing, catching, and reusing rockets. I'd be perfectly fine not spending the Artemis money and outsourcing to SpaceX.

The SpaceX space vehicles are set-up to do some things different than the the Artemis SLS, and SpaceX still hasn't sent anyone up in the Starship system.

Multiple space ship types are needed just like we need multiple land vehicles & aircraft to transport stuff on Earth.
 
I’m still amazed that after all these decades we can send men to the moon but then “splashdown” in the ocean😏. Us old timers remember when an astronaut almost got drowned when his capsule sank😳. Wouldn’t you think if you’ve got the tech to go to the moon and back (and soon land and take off there) you’d be able to land on land? I mean the russkies been landing on Terra firma forever….
 
I’m still amazed that after all these decades we can send men to the moon but then “splashdown” in the ocean😏. Us old timers remember when an astronaut almost got drowned when his capsule sank😳. Wouldn’t you think if you’ve got the tech to go to the moon and back (and soon land and take off there) you’d be able to land on land? I mean the russkies been landing on Terra firma forever….
Dry land returns require a much heavier capsule to withstand the shock and multiple retro rockets to cushion the impact in addition to parachutes. There are cons to ocean landings also, but we've opted for less weight and no retros. Note that with new technology we can now put four crewmembers in the capsule instead of three. I foresee continuing water landings to make room for people and equipment for an eventual moon base.
 
I don't mean to malign NASA, but Elon is landing, catching, and reusing rockets. I'd be perfectly fine not spending the Artemis money and outsourcing to SpaceX.
Uhh, no.

I respect what Musk is doing, but he's not doing it for US.

I don't trust him to do anything for anybody but himself. But he's good at that.

I once heard someone say that Musk would carry a Chinese satellite weapon into orbit if he could get a profit and he'd still try to fool us and shape a positive press release.

My dad flew with Ed White and Gus Grissom. The Apollo 1 disaster was a solemn moment in time. NASA is invested in this. Musk wouldn't be.
 
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