Antelope Valley Press

NASA capsule buzzes moon

- By MARCIA DUNN AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s Orion capsule reached the moon, Monday, whipping around the far side and buzzing the lunar surface on its way to a record-breaking orbit with test dummies sitting in for astronauts.

It’s the first time a capsule has visited the moon since NASA’s Apollo program 50 years ago, and represents a huge milestone in the $4.1 billion test flight that began, last Wednesday.

The close approach of 81 miles occurred as the crew capsule and its three wiredup dummies were on the far side of the moon. Because of a half-hour communicat­ion blackout, flight controller­s in Houston did not know if the critical engine firing went well until the capsule emerged from behind the moon, 232,000 miles from Earth.

The capsule’s cameras sent back a picture of the world — a tiny blue orb surrounded by blackness.

“Our pale blue dot and its 8 billion human inhabitant­s now coming into view,” said Mission Control commentato­r Sandra Jones.

The capsule accelerate­d well beyond 5,000 mph as it regained radio contact, NASA said. Less than an hour later, Orion soared above Tranquilit­y Base, where Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed, on July 20, 1969.

“This is one of those days that you’ve been thinking about and talking about for a long, long time,” flight director Zeb Scoville said.

Earlier in the morning, the moon loomed ever larger in the video beamed back, as the capsule closed the final few thousand miles since blasting off from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center, atop the most powerful rocket ever built by NASA.

Orion needed to slingshot around the moon to pick up enough speed to enter the sweeping, lopsided lunar orbit. Flight controller­s evaluated the data pouring back, to determine if the engine firing went as planned. Another firing will place the capsule in that elongated orbit, Friday.

This coming weekend, Orion will shatter NASA’s distance record for a spacecraft designed for astronauts — nearly 250,000 miles from Earth, set by Apollo 13, in 1970. And it will keep going, reaching a maximum distance from Earth, next Monday, at nearly 270,000 miles.

The capsule will spend close to a week in lunar orbit, before heading home. A Pacific splashdown, is planned for Dec. 11.

Orion has no lunar lander; a touchdown won’t come until NASA astronauts attempt a lunar landing, in 2025, with SpaceX’s Starship. Before then, astronauts will strap into Orion for a ride around the moon, as early as 2024.

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