Politics & Government
NASA's Orion Leaves Moon Orbit For Splashdown Dec. 11 Off San Diego
The Artemis I mission is a test of the entire system prior to sending astronauts around the moon in early 2024.

December 2, 2022
NASA’s Orion spacecraft has fired its main engine to leave a distant lunar orbit and return to Earth, where it will splash down off San Diego on Dec. 11.
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The spacecraft was traveling traveling nearly 240,000 miles from Earth and over 50,000 miles from the Moon in what scientists term a “distant retrograde orbit” on Thursday when the maneuver occurred.
Orion’s orbital maneuvering system engine built by Aerojet Rocketdyne of Sacramento ignited just before 2 p.m. Pacific time and burned for 1 minute and 45 seconds to set the spacecraft on a course that will sling it within 80 miles of the moon’s surface and then on to Earth.
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The capsule will return to Earth on Dec. 11, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego where it will be recovered by a Navy amphibious ship.
The spacecraft, which blasted off Nov. 16 on NASA’s Space Launch System — the most powerful rocket ever flown — is designed to carry four astronauts on missions of up to 21 days to the moon and beyond.
The Artemis I mission is a test of the entire system prior to sending astronauts around the moon in early 2024. It will be followed by a moon landing in the middle of the decade.
“Artemis I will be the first in a series of increasingly complex missions to build a long-term human presence at the Moon for decades to come,” according to NASA.
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