产品展示
  • 大众途铠tcross门槽垫途凯装饰汽车用品车内改装内饰配件恺水杯垫
  • 个性若有战召必回爱国车贴 退伍军人老兵部队文字网红反光车贴纸
  • 长城炮仪表台避光垫炮汽车内饰装饰用品配件中控台改装防滑防晒垫
  • 创意汽车车贴油箱卡通装饰用品新手上路实习标志搞笑个性车身贴纸
  • 汽车音响4寸5寸6寸6.5寸6*9同轴全频高中重低音车载改装喇叭套装
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

NASA's Artemis ship Orion snaps mind

2024-05-18 13:44:32      点击:420

The Orion spacecraft had an intimate brush with the lunar terrain on Monday, hugging the moon's curves just 80 miles above the surface.

Shortly after it emerged around the bend, NASA's moonship delivered some mind-warping photographs that flipped the script on our place in space: The crescent rising in the distance was not the object folks are accustomed to seeing as a clipped fingernail in the sky.

It was us.

"In this view, we see 8 billion human lives, all existing upon our pale blue dot, our blue marble, our very own Spaceship Earth," said Sandra Jones, broadcasting live commentary from mission control in Houston. "And after a long journey, Orion is now coming home."

SEE ALSO:NASA’s Artemis splashdown will put Orion through a nail-biting test

The close approach to the surface involved a 3.5-minute engine firing to increase the moonship's speed over 650 mph, or 960 feet per second. The maneuver was crucial for giving Orion the slingshot it needed to get back to Earth and complete the Artemis I flight test.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday.

Though no one is inside Orion for this 25-day maiden voyage, a successful empty flight will clear the way for astronauts aboard the spaceship next time, with a sequel mission involving a crew slated for as early as 2024.

NASA wants to one day build a lunar-orbiting base, known as Gateway, and ferry astronauts back-and-forth to a moon camp, where it will send the first woman and person of color to walk at the moon's south pole. There astronauts will spend long stretches conducting research and gathering samples.


Related Stories
  • NASA’s Artemis splashdown will put Orion through a nail-biting test
  • NASA is back in the moon business. Here's what that means.
  • NASA astronauts on Artemis could talk to a spaceship computer
  • NASA's pioneering spaceship snaps stunning view of the moon orbiting Earth
  • NASA spaceship beams back really eerie images of the moon

All the while, the agency will keep one eye fixed on the red planet some 140 million miles in the distance. The goal is to use the moon as a training ground for sending humans to Mars.

During Monday's flyby, NASA lost touch with Orion as anticipated for about a half-hour as the spacecraft crossed behind the moon and harnessed its gravity to accelerate. The moon blocks the signal to NASA's Deep Space Network, the giant Earth-based radio dish system that allows communication with spacecraft throughout the solar system. Mission control regained contact with the moonship immediately after.

NASA expects the spacecraft to splash down in the Pacific Ocean in five days on Dec. 11.

顺昌源:做年轻人爱的果酒,带农民共享农产品加工红利
NASA video shows stunning scene from extremely volcanic world Io