Posted on 01/31/2026 12:14:56 PM PST by MtnClimber
Explanation: On flight day 13 (November 28, 2022) of the Artemis 1 mission, the Orion spacecraft reached its maximum distance from Earth. At over 430,000 kilometers from Earth, its distant retrograde orbit also puts Orion nearly 70,000 kilometers from the Moon. In the same field of view in this video frame from flight day 13, planet and large natural satellite even appear about the same apparent size from the spacecraft's perspective. On flight day 26 (December 11, 2022), the uncrewed spacecraft splashed down on its home world concluding the historic Artemis I mission. The Artemis II mission, carrying 4 astronauts around the moon and back again, will launch no earlier than February 8.
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πͺ π π π
bttt
What was the camera mounted to?
A selfie stick.
It must be attached to an arm extending from the spacecraft.
Perhaps one of the solar panels?
The tool bag that the female astronaut let escape during a space walk a while back.
That was actually my first guess...
My father worked for North American Rockwell when I was a kid. They did the work on the Apollo Lunar Module. Long about 1966 he brought home some unclassified literature about Apollo for me and I took it to school (4th grade I think) for show & tell, and gave a presentation. I remember a lot of the other kids laughing at me and the notion that we were planning to go to the moon. Even my teacher thought it was a silly notion.
What the heck does VSVN stand for?
Mtn Climber, thanks for posting!
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