The Arizona Republic

NASA’s Artemis I Orion gets closest approach to moon

- Jamie Groh

NASA’s Orion spacecraft skirted past the moon Monday morning, the closest a human-rated craft has been to the moon since the last Apollo mission in 1972.

NASA’s Artemis I Orion spacecraft completed a powered flyby maneuver on the far side of the moon bringing it just 81 miles above the lunar surface at 7:57 a.m. ET, the start of its maneuverin­g to orbit the moon. A second “burn” scheduled for Friday will put Orion in its final distant retrograde orbit around the moon.

“This is one of those days that you’ve been thinking about and dreaming about for a long, long time,” NASA flight director Zebulon Scoville said during Monday’s livestream of the event. “This morning we saw the Earth set behind the moon as we take the next human-rated vehicle around

the moon preparing to bring humans back there within a few years.”

“This is (a) game changer,” he said. Monday’s flyby was powered by Orion’s Orbital Maneuverin­g System (OMS) engine.

Four of these burns are planned during the 26-day Artemis I mission to the moon and back.

Orion’s Orbital Maneuverin­g System engine is a recycled piece of space shuttle hardware. The repurposed engine flying for the first time on Orion previously flew on 19 space shuttle flights from October 1984 to October 2002.

Orion has been flying an outbound trajectory from Earth to the moon since launching in spectacula­r fashion aboard NASA’s most powerful rocket ever built, the Space Launch System, on Wednesday.

During the livestream, NASA spokespers­on Sandra Jones said the outbound powered flyby was necessary to bring Orion “close enough to the lunar surface to leverage the moon’s gravitatio­nal force and swing the spacecraft around the moon toward entry into distant retrograde orbit.”

Monday’s closest lunar approach flyby transition­ed the Artemis I mission into its next phase.

Orion will spend roughly five days flying beyond the moon. On Friday Orion is set to complete an insertion burn to position itself to enter into a distant retrograde orbit beyond the moon.

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