After multiple delays, NASA’s mission to the moon is finally underway.
Early Wednesday, NASA launched theArtemis I missionfrom the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, over two months after itsinitial attempt was scrubbeddue to engine issues. Days later, the unmanned flight test wasdelayed again due to a fuel leak. Theanticipation of Hurricane Iancaused anadditional delay.
At the heart of the mission are the Orion, NASA’s reusable spacecraft, and the agency’s Space Launch System (SLS), the first rocket in half a century designed to fly astronauts to the moon.
Three test dummies were onboard as the rocket began its debut flight,the AP reported.
According toNASA, the Orion and SLS will fly 280,000 miles from Earth, and thousands of miles past the moon, during a six-week journey. The spacecraft is expected to make splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on Dec. 9.
Ben Smegelsky/NASA

Once the Orion reaches the moon, the spacecraft will stay in orbit for about six days to collect data and allow mission controllers to test the spacecraft’s performance. It will then set a path back to Earth.
During this time, the spacecraft will have remained in space “longer than any ship for astronauts has done without docking to a space station and return home faster and hotter than ever before,” NASA said on itswebsite.
Liam Yanulis/NASA

The Artemis mission was named after the Greek goddess of the moon, who is also the twin sister of Apollo, the god of sun and light. Apollo was also the name given to the series of missions that eventually led to astronautsBuzz Aldrin,Neil Armstrong, andMichael Collinsreaching the moon in 1969.
For the second Artemis mission, NASA plans to send astronauts on a different trajectory than the current mission with the goal of testing “Orion’s critical systems with humans aboard,” according to their website.
In future missions, NASA plans to land the first woman and first person of color on the moon, which could happen as soon as 2025, perNational Geographic. These missions would be the first time NASA sent humans to the moon since Apollo 17 in December 1972.
The objective of the Artemis missions is to create along-term, sustainable lunar presence— while also serving as a foundation to eventually send astronauts to Mars, in addition to the moon.
source: people.com