The Artemis 1 mission is nearing completion and the Orion capsule will return to Earth on December 11. NASA will start LIVE at 18.00, and at 19.40 Orion should reach the waters of the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of California..

Orion capsule and the MoonPhoto: NASA

“We will not let our guard down. There are still some difficult milestones to go through,” Artemis mission director Mike Sarafin said Thursday.

He was referring to a re-entry that would take place at almost 40,000 km/h and the heat shield would have to withstand temperatures of 2,800 C. High-performance parachutes would have to open to slow down. dropping the capsule into the ocean as much as possible.

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Practically, the capsule will reach a speed that is 30 times faster than the speed of sound, and the temperature at which the heat shield will have to withstand will be half the temperature of the surface of the Sun.

The Orion capsule is not new and flew in 2014, but the 5m heat shield was installed recently and will have to cope with these very high temperatures.

Orion should touch the waters of the Pacific Ocean at 12:40 EST (Eastern Time), which means 19:40 Romanian time.

The estimated collision point is 480 km south of the originally calculated location at the start of the mission. A last minute change was needed as the weather forecast indicated bad weather in the north.

The USS Portland will be stationed in the area, ready to pick up the capsule and deliver it to San Diego, where it will be transported to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center for extensive analysis.

As a reminder, there are NO people on board Orion. A manned mission should be launched in 2024.

Artemis 1 mission highlights

November 16: The SLS rocket was successfully launched after previous attempts were marred by problems.

November 21: After traveling approximately 400,000 km, Orion reached the Moon, touching down 130 km from the Moon’s surface.

November 25: Orion entered DRO, an elongated orbit around the Moon

November 26: Orion reaches more than 400,000 km from Earth, surpassing the record set by space shuttle Apollo 13 in 1970, the furthest point ever reached by a spacecraft capable of carrying humans.

November 28: Maximum distance from Earth reached as part of the Artemis 1 mission: 430,000 km.

December 3: Orion re-entered the Moon’s sphere of influence, which meant that the Moon, not the Earth, exerted the dominant gravitational force on the capsule.

December 5: The capsule came within 128 km of the lunar surface, the shortest distance of the Artemis 1 mission. Immediately afterwards, the engines fired for 3 minutes and 27 seconds to put Orion on a precise trajectory towards Earth.

December 11: scheduled return to Earth.