ESA title
SLS Artemis I ready for launch
Science & Exploration

Artemis I launch attempt scrubbed

25/08/2022 78540 views 653 likes
ESA / Science & Exploration / Human and Robotic Exploration

In brief

Update 30 August: NASA is holding a media briefing for updates on the Moon rocket, audio of the teleconference will stream live on 31 August from 00:00 CEST (30 August, 23:00 BST) via NASA.

Update 29 August, 15:00 CEST: the launch of Artemis I has been cancelled for today as teams work through an issue with an engine bleed. Teams will continue to gather data, before announcing the timing of the next launch attempt.

The countdown has started for the first human-rated launch to the Moon in over half a century. ESA’s European Service Module will be powering the Orion spacecraft to our natural satellite and back.

In-depth

Watch the most powerful rocket ever built launch on 29 August from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, USA. Teams on Earth have a two-hour window from 14:33 CEST to initiate liftoff, so the orbits of our planet and the Moon are aligned for the Artemis I mission.

Two more dates are available if liftoff is not possible on 29 August. The Artemis Moon mission can also be launched on 2 and 5 September.

The countdown to launch includes a large amount of fuel loaded into NASA’s Space Launch System rocket SLS. Tanking starts eight hours before launch with the flight director asking for a “go” 15 minutes before launch.

Follow the livestream on ESA Web TV starting at 12:30 CEST (11:30 BST).

This journey will serve as a test of both the Orion spacecraft and its SLS rocket ahead of crewed flights to the Moon. No crew will be on board Orion this time, and the spacecraft will be controlled by teams on Earth. The second Artemis mission will see four astronauts travel around the Moon on a flyby voyage around our natural satellite.

The European Service Module – or ESM – provides for all astronauts’ basic needs, such as water, oxygen, nitrogen, temperature control, power and propulsion. Much like a train engine pulls passenger carriages and supplies power, the European Service Module will take the Orion capsule to its destination and back.

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