There is already an Artemis 2 update thread: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=54249.0Is this thread intended to be just for booster processing updates?
Quote from: cplchanb on 08/28/2022 10:42 pmWill they orbit the moon a few times or a will they just do a direct slingshot back? It seems like a wasted opportunity if it's the latter. Apollo 8 orbited the moon several times
Will they orbit the moon a few times or a will they just do a direct slingshot back? It seems like a wasted opportunity if it's the latter. Apollo 8 orbited the moon several times
Doesn't the ICPS perform the TLI burn? Infographic says that the ESM performs the TLI burn. I would be very surprised if ICPS can only get Orion to high Earth orbit.I mean technically the moon is in high Earth orbit, and so is JWST, so maybe that's what they mean.
(ICPS later conducts a disposal burn for atmospheric reentry.)
Quote from: kdhilliard on 08/29/2022 01:34 am (ICPS later conducts a disposal burn for atmospheric reentry.) I thought the plan was, at one point, that ICPS would perform its own TLI burn after separating from Orion to deliver secondary smallsat payloads to the moon. Has this plan changed?
Quote from: cplchanb on 08/28/2022 10:42 pmWill they orbit the moon a few times or a will they just do a direct slingshot back? It seems like a wasted opportunity if it's the latter. Apollo 8 orbited the moon several timesArtemis 2 does not enter Lunar orbit but instead flies a "hybrid free return trajectory".See NASA’s First Flight With Crew (NASA, Aug 27, 2018)10 day mission: First a 115 x 1,800 mile (185 x 2,900 km) 90 minute orbit for initial checkout, then a 235 x 68,000 (380 x 110,000 km) 42 hour high-Earth orbit, both done by ICPS, with the later representing most of the effort toward TLI. Orion then separates from ICPS to conduct proximity operations. (ICPS later conducts a disposal burn for atmospheric reentry.) At perigee, Orion's service module completes the TLI. Then 4 days out past the Moon and 4,600 miles (7,400) beyond, then 4 days back.So no lunar orbit, but an interesting start with the high-Earth orbit.
Quote from: kdhilliard on 08/29/2022 01:34 amQuote from: cplchanb on 08/28/2022 10:42 pmWill they orbit the moon a few times or a will they just do a direct slingshot back? It seems like a wasted opportunity if it's the latter. Apollo 8 orbited the moon several timesArtemis 2 does not enter Lunar orbit but instead flies a "hybrid free return trajectory".See NASA’s First Flight With Crew (NASA, Aug 27, 2018)10 day mission: First a 115 x 1,800 mile (185 x 2,900 km) 90 minute orbit for initial checkout, then a 235 x 68,000 (380 x 110,000 km) 42 hour high-Earth orbit, both done by ICPS, with the later representing most of the effort toward TLI. Orion then separates from ICPS to conduct proximity operations. (ICPS later conducts a disposal burn for atmospheric reentry.) At perigee, Orion's service module completes the TLI. Then 4 days out past the Moon and 4,600 miles (7,400) beyond, then 4 days back.So no lunar orbit, but an interesting start with the high-Earth orbit.Interesting that Orion itself can do TLI while for Saturn V the SIVB was required
Quote from: lrk on 08/29/2022 04:48 pmQuote from: kdhilliard on 08/29/2022 01:34 am (ICPS later conducts a disposal burn for atmospheric reentry.) I thought the plan was, at one point, that ICPS would perform its own TLI burn after separating from Orion to deliver secondary smallsat payloads to the moon. Has this plan changed?I believe that was a casualty of the rendezvous component being added to the mission.