| Ultimi arrivi - The Project Artemis |

0012-The_Dark_Side-Artemis_2.jpegThe Moon (Dark Side with crescent Earth)110 visiteMareKromiumApr 07, 2026
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0000-The_Moon.pngThe Moon (Earth-facing Side)103 visiteMareKromiumApr 07, 2026
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0011-nasa-artemis-orion-flyby-2_gif.gifOrion's Second Lunar Fly-By (GIF-Movie)137 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumDic 07, 2022
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0010-Artemis_One-Surface.jpgIs this a "beautiful" picture?!?91 visiteCaption Originale:"These detailed (where?!?) black and white image was snapped by the Orion Spacecraft's onboard Optical Navigation Camera on day 6 of the Mission, the same day it performed a crucial engine burn".
Nota: foto orribile, sovraesposta e di qualità scadente. Le fotocamere Apollo erano 1000 anni più avanti.MareKromiumNov 28, 2022
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0009-Artemis_One-Far_Side_of_the_Moon.jpgThe bright and yet dark side of the Moon...94 visiteNASA officials say Artemis 1 mission teams are "giddy" after witnessing how well their Orion spacecraft has been performing so far on its way towards Lunar Orbit.
Artemis 1 launched at 01:47 EST (06:47 GMT) on Nov. 16, blasting off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida in a spectacular display of the sheer power of NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. The Orion spacecraft reached Earth orbit shortly after, and then at 87 minutes after launch performed a so-called Trans Lunar Injection burn to send it hurtling towards the moon. On Monday (Nov. 21), Orion performed another burn to send the Spacecraft close enough to the Lunar Surface to leverage (---> use, take advantage of) the Moon's Gravity to pull the Spacecraft around the Moon itself into a distant retrograde orbit.
After collecting data from that propulsive maneuver, NASA Officials held a briefing Monday evening (Nov. 21) to discuss Orion's powered flyby of the Moon. Judd Frieling, flight director at NASA's Johnson Space Center, said Orion Mission Team Members are "giddy" (to have a sensation of whirling and then a tendency to fall; synonym: dizzy) with the current performance they are seeing from the spacecraft after the flyby, which saw the Spacecraft come within about 80 miles of the Lunar Surface.MareKromiumNov 28, 2022
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0008-Artemis_One-photo1669033801.jpegWhat a "Couple"!113 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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0005-Artemis_One.jpgLook at Us!96 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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0006-Artemis_One-photo1669025926.jpegHello Moon!94 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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0001-Artemis_One-52503823645_68f1fc0f28_o.jpgLift-off: back to the Moon?!?108 visiteThe most powerful rocket in the World, carrying the Orion Spacecraft, goes on the Artemis I flight test, Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2022, from Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 1:47 a.m. EST.MareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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0002-Artemis_One.jpgThe Artemis Mission123 visiteFrame auto-esplicativo.MareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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0003-Artemis_One.jpgLook! The Moon, again...111 visiteOn Nov. 20, 2022, such as the fifth day of the 25,5-day Artemis I mission, a camera mounted on the tip of one of Orion’s solar array wings captured this footage of the Spacecraft and the Moon as it continued to grow nearer to our neighbor. The Spacecraft entered the lunar sphere of influence at 2:09 p.m. EST, making the Moon, instead of Earth, the main gravitational force acting on it. Orion completed its first fly-by on the morning of Nov. 21, 2022.MareKromiumNov 22, 2022
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