Artemis 2 launch - humans return to the Moon after 54 years

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  • #61
256bits said:
Artemis, twin of Apollo.
Fitting name for the second series of manned moon missions.
And she personified the Moon. But Artemis was the older of the twins.
 
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  • #62
Charles Link said:
Did the rocket speed up when moon's gravity became stronger than earth's?
I'm not sure I would expect it to, because the trajectory it's following is so far from the Moon, as compared with the Apollo missions. I haven't run the numbers, but I suspect the Moon's force is just curving the trajectory, not speeding it up.
 
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  • #63
I did find from one article in a google that the expected speed at closest approach would be 3,139 m.p.h. I am lead to believe the website that showed no increase all day and a decrease to below 1,000 m.p.h. was inaccurate.

Edit: I found a video on Facebook that may offer at least a partial explanation: The rocket passes the moon to the left of the moon and then loops to the right when it is behind it, with the moon moving right to left. The 3,139 number might be the speed relative to the moon. I estimate the moon's right to left speed at about 2,000 m.p.h. Edit: With a google I see the moon moves about 2,288 m.p.h. in its orbit around the earth.

Meanwhile an acceleration of the rocket to the right will create a velocity component to the right that adds as a vector to the forward velocity component (relative to earth) and may not affect the speed w.r.t. the earth all that much.
 
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  • #64
mfb said:
The area brightness of an object does not depend on distance.
True of course, and presumably relevant in this case, but to avoid confusion this needs to be accompanied by the important point that if the angular size of an individual object (such as a star) is smaller than the sensor or eye resolution then the apparent brightness is decreased accordingly (which is presumably the main factor limiting the number of stars which we can see with the naked eye).
 
  • #65
Metro UK today, Wiseman said humans have "not evolved" to see images like the ones they are seeing.

1775647688755.webp
 
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  • #66
Some gorgeous photos here:

Artemis II Lunar Flyby (NASA)
Quote: "The first flyby images of the Moon captured by NASA’s Artemis II astronauts during their historic test flight reveal regions no human has ever seen before—including a rare in-space solar eclipse. Released Tuesday, April 7, 2026, the photos were taken on April 6 during the crew’s seven‑hour pass over the lunar far side, marking humanity’s return to the Moon’s vicinity."
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/lunar-flyby/

Examples:

art002e009289~large.webp

A Setting Earth

art002e009281~large.webp

Shadows at the Edge of Lunar Day

art002e009282~large.webp

Shadows Across Vavilov Crater

They got better Moon photos than me! 😢 :smile:

Of course it is impossible for us terrestrial astrophotographers to get the Earth in a shot without faking it, but how can we at PF counter this novel threat from these four upstarts sitting in a tin can?

Can I spend a fortune and buy dedicated gear for Moon photography? (maybe, but I won't :smile:)
Can @timmdeeg get himself a new super expensive lens?
Does @russ_watters have any unknown tricks up his sleeve?
Can @Andy Resnick conjure up some optical magic with his gear?
Can @collinsmark direct his monstrosity of a scope towards the Moon and pull off some stunts?

What to do, what to do? 😄
 
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  • #67
Look, here is one of the upstarts taking photos:

Photographer at Work
art002e009295~large.webp

Page said:
art002e009295 (April 6, 2026) – Astronaut Jeremy Hansen captures an image through the camera shroud covering window 2 of the Orion spacecraft. The camera shroud, essentially a curtain with a hole for the lens to pass through, is used to prevent light from the cabin from reflecting on the windowpanes.
Image Credit: NASA
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/image-detail/amf-art002e009295/

I think this is close to cheating; he was one lucky dude and got really, really close to his subject (the Moon), and furthermore he is enjoying the benefits of zero gravity.
Bah! And I bet he is using image stabilization too on his camera. I'm telling you, he had it easy.

(I'm only joking, of course :smile:)
 
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