Artemis Moon Mission 2026

They're off!

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I suspect the "I don't understand this, so it must be fake" statements to begin within seconds.

(I was actually seeing them before the launch, but now they can be based on the current mission, so maybe we'll get some new claims.)
 
They're off!

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I suspect the "I don't understand this, so it must be fake" statements to begin within seconds.

(I was actually seeing them before the launch, but now they can be based on the current mission, so maybe we'll get some new claims.)
There are already two "orb" threads on /r/ufos, including a comment to look for them in this stretch of video... (A third one got whacked, probably for snark.)
 
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There appears to be a malfunction- hopefully it can be rectified.

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BBC News 23:57 UTC, 02 April 2026, "'Great view': Nasa spacecraft orbiting Earth after spectacular launch on Moon mission", https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c4g4ygw0r02t

One hopes the crew checked there was no-one behind the privacy curtain before they took off.

"Well, I was doing last-minute checks on the capsule when I felt nature call, and it's a long way down the service tower, so I knew I shouldn't but didn't think it could do any harm... next thing I know, the crew were clambering in; I was hoping I might be able to creep past them but I didn't get the opportunity. Should've said something, I guess... It was all hushed up, of course, but yeah, I am kinda proud of being one of the five humans to have travelled furthest from the Earth.... I've boldly gone where no-one had gone before."
 
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This guy captured something odd (or maybe not):

Source: https://youtu.be/KedHFmomaCM?si=QqNwOtC9UEFMIRIc

External Quote:
The double flash at 1:22 in the 11" main telescope video and at 8:49 in the 80mm refractor video (t+ 1:10 roughly) are a true mystery to me. They were captured in two independent cameras, a Blackmagic Pocket Cinema 4K with a 0.63 focal reducer and a Canon 90D respectively, with two different telescopes that were not perfectly co-aligned, yet the flashes appear in the same place relative to the rocket. This discounts the possibility of a lens flare, hot pixel, or other individual camera artifact. I spotted one of the weather balloons being launched from the Cape, but I was north of that balloon and south of the rocket. I also know from experience that my telescope will easily resolve weather balloons at this kind of range. NASA's WB-57 was also positioned south of me from what I've seen on flight tracking sites.
 
This guy captured something odd (or maybe not):

Source: https://youtu.be/KedHFmomaCM?si=QqNwOtC9UEFMIRIc

External Quote:
The double flash at 1:22 in the 11" main telescope video and at 8:49 in the 80mm refractor video (t+ 1:10 roughly) are a true mystery to me. They were captured in two independent cameras, a Blackmagic Pocket Cinema 4K with a 0.63 focal reducer and a Canon 90D respectively, with two different telescopes that were not perfectly co-aligned, yet the flashes appear in the same place relative to the rocket. This discounts the possibility of a lens flare, hot pixel, or other individual camera artifact. I spotted one of the weather balloons being launched from the Cape, but I was north of that balloon and south of the rocket. I also know from experience that my telescope will easily resolve weather balloons at this kind of range. NASA's WB-57 was also positioned south of me from what I've seen on flight tracking sites.

Not sure if this is the right answer but seems to be what he is going with.


Source: https://x.com/turndownformars/status/2039599837205975301



Source: https://x.com/astroferg/status/2039601017638076621
 
They have made the trans lunar injection burn that sends the spacecraft outbound to and around the moon, into a "free return trajectory" which means the path they are on will whip them around the moon and back towards Earth without any other major engine burns, though they will likely do course corrections burns to tweak the trajectory...
External Quote:

Artemis II's mission management gave the all-clear Thursday for the Orion spacecraft to move through space with a translunar injection burn, one of the most critical moments in NASA's first crewed mission to the moon in more than 50 years. Now, the spacecraft is out of the Earth's orbit and heading on a course for the moon.

The translunar injection (TLI) is the last major burn, or the firing up of engines to maneuver through space, on the Artemis II mission. Though it will make smaller burns, the TLI burn puts Orion on a path to use the moon's gravity to fly around it.
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/...emis-engine-burn-moon-earth-orbit-space-nasa/

They had me a little nervous, I was tracking this while at dinner, surreptitiously glancing at my phone, and while the "GO" decision for the burn was widely reported, the successful burn has not gotten a lot of coverage.

They're on their way outbound!
 
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