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Congratulations NASA!!! Orion successfully tested!!!

SvenSvensonov

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Hej, Poland. America can into Space:usflag:

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NASA's Orion spacecraft is arguably the most advanced spacecraft ever constructed. If it successfully manages to launch from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida then subsequently re-enter the Earth's atmosphere, we could soon see it carrying astronauts to the moon, Mars—and perhaps even beyond.

11:29am EST: Splashdown confirmed! Our baby is back, stable and upright.

11:27am EST: The parachutes are out!

11:17am EST: Orion is finishing its orbit and is beginning re-entry, a process that will take about 9 stressful minutes.

7:55am EST: You can watch the entire launch again in the video below.


7:25am EST: 18 minutes in, the second engine was cut off successfully. It'll be fired again in about 90 minutes.

7:16am EST: You can watch live views from Orion's cameras here.

7:14am EST: Orion is now in orbit.

7:13am EST: So far, everything is going to plan!

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7:05am EST: Orion has taken off!

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7:03am EST: All the Orion launch teams have given a "GO" for liftoff at 7:05amET.

7:01am EST: Terminal countdown has started.

7:00am EST: The Orion launch director has gien permission to launch. Just four minutes now!

6:54am EST: Houston's Mission control is poised!

B4FvPg2CQAIdI69.jpg


6:49am ET: Orion has started the built in 15 minute hold. NASA will start the terminal countdown when that's over.

*BONUS PICTURE!!!

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*As was once famously uttered;

"This is one small step for man, one gigantic F*** You to everyone who thinks the US space program is dead!"
 
Last edited:
. . .
View attachment 161119

NASA's Orion spacecraft is arguably the most advanced spacecraft ever constructed. If it successfully manages to launch from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida then subsequently re-enter the Earth's atmosphere, we could soon see it carrying astronauts to the moon, Mars—and perhaps even beyond.

11:29am EST: Splashdown confirmed! Our baby is back, stable and upright.

11:27am EST: The parachutes are out!

11:17am EST: Orion is finishing its orbit and is beginning re-entry, a process that will take about 9 stressful minutes.

7:55am EST: You can watch the entire launch again in the video below.


7:25am EST: 18 minutes in, the second engine was cut off successfully. It'll be fired again in about 90 minutes.

7:16am EST: You can watch live views from Orion's cameras here.

7:14am EST: Orion is now in orbit.

7:13am EST: So far, everything is going to plan!

View attachment 161120

View attachment 161121

7:05am EST: Orion has taken off!

View attachment 161122

7:03am EST: All the Orion launch teams have given a "GO" for liftoff at 7:05amET.

7:01am EST: Terminal countdown has started.

7:00am EST: The Orion launch director has gien permission to launch. Just four minutes now!

6:54am EST: Houston's Mission control is poised!

View attachment 161123

6:49am ET: Orion has started the built in 15 minute hold. NASA will start the terminal countdown when that's over.

*BONUS PICTURE!!!

View attachment 161124

*As was once famously uttered;

This is one small step for man, one gigantic F*** You to everyone who thinks the US space program is dead!

This one is for future Mars mission, right? Please do it sooner as I am not going to make past 2037!!:(:enjoy:
 
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This one is for future Mars mission, right? Please do it sooner as I am not going to make past 2037!!:(:enjoy:

Thank you so much for giving me an excuse to post this!!! I'll let this article answer your question:

Orion Is a Triumph. Let's Not Waste It

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NASA's spacecraft Orion just survived its very first test flight. The shiny, new space capsule will one day carry a human crew to Mars or to an asteroid—wait, which is it? Amidst the hype, there's still an unforgivable confusion about what comes next.

The launches of new spacecraft are usually occasions for celebration, and my colleague Jesus has nailed what's so inspiring about Orion. Now comes the hard part: Figuring out where it can take us, and generating the will to make it happen.

Mars, the reboot

NASA hasn't sent humans past low Earth orbit since the Apollo program in the 70s, and it hasn't put any humans into space period (relying instead on the Russians) since the Space Shuttle program ended in in 2011. Orion is the answer to that stagnation. Bolstered by a powerful rocket still in development called the Space Launch System (SLS), the spacecraft is designed to escape the gravity of Earth and take humans into deep space. The current plan is to lasso a small asteroid with a robotic ship and put it in orbit around the moon. The SLS and Orion will then take astronauts to visit that asteroid.

NASA hopes that the knowledge gained from the Asteroid Redirect Mission will eventually help them put Orion on Mars—if the agency has the money, which it does not in its current budget, because building giant ships that blast mankind into space is expensive as hell.

If this all sounds convoluted and roundabout and, let's face it, not remotely as exciting as an actual plan to go to Mars, there's a very good reason: This plan was salvaged from the original goal, a canceled program meant to land humans on the Red Planet. It's a consolation prize, and it shows.

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Here's what happened: In 2004—before wars in Iraq and Afghanistan totally sapped the U.S. budget—President Bush asked NASA to develop a new plan for human spaceflight. They came up with Constellation, a program that was supposed to put humans back on the moon by 2020 and on Mars in the years after. Orion would be the spacecraft that took us there.

By 2009, however, a blue-ribbon panel concluded that there was no way NASA would have enough money to get to Mars. The cost of building a rocket alone would leave nothing left over to develop the things the rocket would transport. President Obama responded by canceling Constellation, so now we have the "Flexible Path to Mars." That's why Orion is going to an asteroid first.

Will the backup plan need a backup?

On one hand, salvaging the workable pieces of a canceled plan is admirable. On the other hand, there's a little enthusiasm for the Asteroid Redirect Mission. Even NASA's own Advisory Councilcalled it a "dead-end element" for a Mars mission. Mark Sykes, president of the Planetary Science Institute, told Scientific American "It's a waste of money. It doesn't advance anything and everything that could benefit from it could be benefited far more by other, cheaper, more efficient means." He told a congressional committee as much, too. Republicans now in charge of Congress also have every reason to not fund a plan approved by Obama.

NASA still has its work cut out for it with Orion's mission. First, it needs to identify a suitable asteroid. The asteroid needs to be small, about the size of Orion itself, and solid, not a rapidly spinning collection of loose rubble—no easy feat without sending out a probe. Second, it needs to actually develop and build the robotic spaceship that will tow an asteroid, which should cost at least a couple billion. That's a lot of effort for a dead-end.

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And then there's the problem of morale. A NASA astronaut told the Houston Chronicle about an astronauts-only meeting at the Johnson Space Center in 2013.

Lori Garver, who had advised Obama and then become NASA's deputy administrator, was visiting Johnson Space Center. After "rah-rah" remarks, Garver polled the roughly four dozen astronauts in attendance where they wanted to go. An asteroid? No hands. Mars? Three hands. The moon? All the rest of the hands.

Of course, flinging a capsule 3,000 miles into to space and having it land safely is still a remarkable feat of engineering. The test flight today is a step forward, but towards what? So many other pieces and so much money still needs to fall into place before we get anywhere—whether that's Mars or just an asteroid.

The success of Orion's first test flight was a testament to human ingenuity, an occasion we can and should all be enormously proud of. Proud enough, anyway, to make sure it doesn't go to waste.

From Orion Is a Triumph. Let's Not Waste It

* I hope this answers your question! If not I'll field additional ones.
 
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I don't understand the hype with the orion space program. Its just a bigger crew capsule able to accomodate astronauts for months in space travel. Yes it has the ability to take astronauts far, but whats the big deal???

America just built upon what they have learnt in last 50 years of space exploration. Orion space program is not something pathbreaking. Its a bigger space capsule. Not something America alone is able to pull off. China, Russia and Japan are more than capable to come up with similar capsules.

I would add India to it, but that would call a lot of haters. India will will launch its crew capsule on Dec 15th, and once it is validated, I would consider India capable of undertaking such level of missions as well.
 
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Why Orion's launch is the best news for humanity in a long time

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I have always been sad that I never got to see the beginning of humanity's ultimate journey, and even sadder to realize that in 1972 we abandoned a path that could have possibly gotten us to Mars and other planets by now. Today we opened the gate to that path again. We should rejoice—we are going back to the stars.

In the 60s we dipped our toes in the sea of space. It was exciting. It lead to countless discoveries and technologies that made possible the world we have today. We dipped our toes in the waters of the cosmos but then we ran back to the shacks of that comfy beach we call Earth, scared.

1972 marked humanity's last mission to the Moon and with it, all the optimism of the space era died. But on the brink of nuclear annihilation, with the war in Vietnam raging on, our journey to the Moon saved the world's collective mind. As television reporter David Brinkley said during Apollo 8's live Christmas Eve television special, broadcasted from the orbit of the Moon:

The human race, without many victories lately, had one today. Thank you Apollo 8. You saved 1968.

Apollo 8 also brought us this photo. It had huge repercussions in humanity's common psyche, starting the environmental movement and the idea that we should collectively work to establish peace on Earth. After this photo—and the Blue Marble—humans realized, at last, that we needed to work together. Slowly, things began to change.


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They didn't change fast enough. We are still working on that. And thanks to miserable politics and our inability to deal with long term plans, we abandoned the natural path that the 1960s space program opened.

It was perhaps too early, like Carl Sagan said in his 1994 book The Pale Blue Dot, in beautiful words magnificently illustrated by this extraordinary short film by Erik Wernquist:


For all its material advantages, the sedentary life has left us edgy, unfulfilled. Even after 400 generations in villages and cities, we haven't forgotten. The open road still softly calls, like a nearly forgotten song of childhood. We invest far-off places with a certain romance. This appeal, I suspect, has been meticulously crafted by natural selection as an essential element in our survival. Long summers, mild winters, rich harvests, plentiful game—none of them lasts forever. It is beyond our powers to predict the future. Catastrophic events have a way of sneaking up on us, of catching us unaware. Your own life, or your band's, or even your species' might be owed to a restless few—drawn, by a craving they can hardly articulate or understand, to undiscovered lands and new worlds.

Herman Melville, in Moby Dick, spoke for wanderers in all epochs and meridians: "I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas..."

Maybe it's a little early. Maybe the time is not quite yet. But those other worlds— promising untold opportunities—beckon.

Silently, they orbit the Sun, waiting.


20 years later after those words, it feels like the time has come.

We sent an amazing rover to Mars in a seemingly impossible mission that had the entire world watching with baited breath. A few weeks ago, we landed on a comet. This week, we sent another spaceship to return material from an asteroid. Today we launched the spaceship that will take humans back to the Moon, asteroids, Phobos, and Mars.

So yes, I look at Orion rising against the deep blue, I hear the cheers coming out of my mouth and countless others, I see the millions of people watching this apparently insignificant event—just a spacecraft that is empty going up and splashing on the Atlantic Ocean—and it feels like the 60s all over again.

The path is open again, a sunbeam illuminating its gates, now clean of the vines that had grown through all these years of abandonment.

Today is the day. Today we are starting to get back to the stars. And this time there's no way back.

From Why Orion's launch is the best news for humanity in a long time
 
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Orion Test Pictures!

USS Anchorage picks up the Orion capsule
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Screen-grab of the Orion capsule - courtesy of NASA-TV
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Orion's Parachutes
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Just a spec on the horizen
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About the parachutes

About the heat shield

The retrieval flotilla
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Long-exposure shot of the launch
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Lift-off video

Delta IV
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Orion program management team
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Mars exploration one step closer after Nasa’s flawless Orion craft test flight

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White smoke rose in the air and green dye coloured the ocean to guide the USS Anchorage and smaller recovery vessels to the spot where Nasa’s Orion crew capsule splashed down to Earth after a flawless and awe-inspiring test flight on Friday.

Cameras mounted inside Orion caught the casual splendour of the world turning beneath it as the empty capsule lapped the planet twice before tearing into the atmosphere on its journey home at 20,000 mph.

As its heatshield rose to twice the temperature of molten lava, Orion popped its parachutes and gently floated down, scoring a bullseye on its target landing site off the coast of Baja California in Mexico at 4.29pm GMT.

“There’s your new spacecraft, America,” mission control commentator Rob Navias said, as Orion neared the water. The capsule will be carried for the next few days in the well deck of the USS Anchorage back to San Diego, 630 miles to the north-east.

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The launch at 12.05pm GMT aboard a Delta IV heavy rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida, was as free of problems as Thursday’s aborted attempt was full of them. Immediately, Nasa tweeted “Liftoff! #Orion’s flight test launches a critical step on our #JourneytoMars”. Four hours and 24 minutes later, after flying further and faster than any spacecraft designed for humans since the Apollo moon programme, Orion splashed back to Earth in the Pacific. The US space agency hopes that the successful launch will foreshadow the first human expedition to Mars.

The mission tested how Orion fares in the extreme conditions of space travel.Nasa has designed the capsule to take up to six astronauts into deep space, and its 16ft-wide heat shield and sophisticated service module are among the features whose durability will be inspected upon return.

The capsule not only survived launch and orbit, but also temperatures of about 2,200C (4,000F) as it returned through Earth’s atmosphere. Nasa also tested an emergency abort function developed to save astronauts in the event of a malfunction during launch.

The agency has planned a second unmanned flight for 2018, and a manned mission to travel around the moon for the 2020s. Eventually, it hopes to send astronauts on an Orion mission through deep space to an asteroid and Mars in the 2030s.

Nasa had to postpone an initial launch on Thursday after a boat entered the launch area, strong winds forced automatic aborts and two valves failed to close properly.

“The first humans who will set foot on Mars are alive on Earth today,” said Charles Bolden, Nasa’s chief administrator, who watched the dawn launch with his wife.

“Everyone wants to go to Mars,” said Nasa astronaut Rex Waldheim, following the launch. He was on the final flight of the space shuttle programme, in 2011, a mission that he said was tinged with melancholy.

The end of that programme signalled the loss of America’s ability to launch its own astronauts into space. Since 2011, it has been buying seats on Russian Soyuz launches to fly to and from the international space station.

“Now we’ve turned the corner. Orion is flying,” said Waldheim.

Independent experts have been more cautious. “I think to say that this is the road to Mars is a bit much but one shouldn’t detract from the importance of this launch. All of Nasa’s future exploration plans are predicated on this system,” said Ian Crawford, professor of planetary science at Birkbeck, University of London.

On Thursday night, engineers investigated a problem with the rocket’s fuel tank valves, which had led to the postponement. Minutes before lift-off, the valves failed to close correctly. Rather than risk leakage during the flight, mission controllers scrubbed the attempt.

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On Friday morning, engineers reported that the liquid hydrogen fuel, which exists at temperatures of about –250°C, probably froze the valves so they became stuck.

So mission operators commanded the rocket to periodically close and open them during fuelling in the runup to launch. This kept them flexible, and the spacecraft took off exactly as its 2 hour 39 minute launch window opened.

The window was dictated by the trajectory needed to bring the spacecraft back to Earth in the Pacific, 275 miles west of Baja, California. This meant looping the spacecraft around the Earth twice. On the second orbit, an upper-stage rocket engine boosted Orion to an altitude of 3,600 miles, about 15 times higher than the orbit of the international space station.

This is as far as existing American rockets can send the spacecraft. To get to the moon and beyond, Nasa is developing the Space Launch System (SLS), a rocket larger than the Saturn Vs which took astronauts to the moon in the 1960s.

But budgets are tight. The next launch of Orion is not scheduled until 2017-18. This will be the maiden flight of the SLS. Astronauts are not likely to fly on Orion/SLS until 2021, although even this date has been called into question.

“Nasa spokespeople are now heavily policed by their PR machine and it is noticeable that in the last three press conferences they have bucked confirmation that it will take place by then. We shall see,” said Dr David Baker, a former Nasa staffer.

Going further from Earth is “the name of the game”, according to Bobbie Gail Swan, of RadWorks – Advanced Radiation Technologies.

Swan is the project manager for an instrument that flew on Orion. Called Bird (battery operated independent radiation detector), it monitors the radiation experienced while in space. This is a key health concern, especially on a trip to Mars which would require humans to undertake voyages of nine to 12 months in space at a time.

Nasa said all of Orion’s systems operated “to perfection” during the flight, which cost $370m (£237m).

If all continues to go well, the earliest a Mars mission is likely to take place in the mid 2030s, meaning that those future astronauts are today’s pre-schoolers.

To help inspire this generation, Nasa collaborated with Sesame Street to have items such as Ernie’s rubber ducky, Oscar’s pet worm, Slimey, and the Cookie Monster’s cookie inside Orion for the flight.

Nasa timeline
12 April 1981 Launch of first shuttle, Columbia, which was said to herald an era of frequent access to space.

28 January 1986 Challenger disaster. Lost 73 seconds after launch, seven astronauts were killed and the shuttle fleet was grounded for three years.

1 February 2003 Columbia disaster.The original space shuttle was lost during re-entry. It killed seven more astronauts and helped speed up the retirement of the programme.

8 July 2011 After 134 missions, Atlantis was the final space shuttle flight.

5 December 2014 Orion test launch. After a 24-hour postponement, the first new American crew capsule was launched and returned to earth.

2018? The second test flight will be a circumnavigation of the Moon.

2021? First Orion launch with crew. Four astronauts will make a trip to lunar orbit.

2030? Orion trip to Mars. The first voyage to Mars will last for 18-24 months. Astronauts will probably not land on Mars itself but study it from orbit.


From Mars exploration one step closer after Nasa’s flawless Orion craft test flight | Science | The Guardian
 
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Hej, Poland. America can into Space:usflag:

View attachment 161119

NASA's Orion spacecraft is arguably the most advanced spacecraft ever constructed. If it successfully manages to launch from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida then subsequently re-enter the Earth's atmosphere, we could soon see it carrying astronauts to the moon, Mars—and perhaps even beyond.

11:29am EST: Splashdown confirmed! Our baby is back, stable and upright.

11:27am EST: The parachutes are out!

11:17am EST: Orion is finishing its orbit and is beginning re-entry, a process that will take about 9 stressful minutes.

7:55am EST: You can watch the entire launch again in the video below.


7:25am EST: 18 minutes in, the second engine was cut off successfully. It'll be fired again in about 90 minutes.

7:16am EST: You can watch live views from Orion's cameras here.

7:14am EST: Orion is now in orbit.

7:13am EST: So far, everything is going to plan!

View attachment 161120

View attachment 161121

7:05am EST: Orion has taken off!

View attachment 161122

7:03am EST: All the Orion launch teams have given a "GO" for liftoff at 7:05amET.

7:01am EST: Terminal countdown has started.

7:00am EST: The Orion launch director has gien permission to launch. Just four minutes now!

6:54am EST: Houston's Mission control is poised!

View attachment 161123

6:49am ET: Orion has started the built in 15 minute hold. NASA will start the terminal countdown when that's over.

*BONUS PICTURE!!!

View attachment 161124

*As was once famously uttered;

"This is one small step for man, one gigantic F*** You to everyone who thinks the US space program is dead!"


Awesome post.

Thank you
 
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