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-   -   Did anyone see Artemis last night? (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/did-anyone-see-artemis-last-night-336742/)

FoPAA 11-16-2022 01:18 PM

Did anyone see Artemis last night?
 
I ran out to see it a couple of minutes after launch time, and I don’t know if I was too late or if it was too cloudy, I couldn’t see anything.

Bill14564 11-16-2022 01:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoPAA (Post 2158027)
I ran out to see it a couple of minutes after launch time, and I don’t know if I was too late or if it was too cloudy, I couldn’t see anything.

If it was truly a couple of minutes then it may have traveled far enough to become too dim to see through the clouds.

I tried to watch but gave up at 1AM with a hold at T-10 minutes and no idea when the hold would end.

chrisinva 11-16-2022 01:30 PM

The 1:04 am launch was delayed about 30-40 min. It went off spectacularly around 1:34 am, large orange thrust much bigger than the usual yellow fire from the com launches. Saw this for about 5 seconds, then nothing more. Artemis was scheduled to fly eastward over the Atlantic so maybe it went out of sight quickly. Also, it was somewhat cloudy & that may have been why I saw no more. But spectacular!

chrisinva 11-16-2022 02:38 PM

EarthSky | Artemis 1 launches to the moon!

Good, free newsletter to subscribe to re: what's happening out there.

Dotneko 11-16-2022 03:20 PM

It finally went off around 145 am ish. Large orange glow in the sky, then you could see the rocket for about 6 seconds. The speaker from NASA on the launch channel was annoying as heck imo. Worse than some of the vapid weathergirls lol.

ScottGo 11-16-2022 03:31 PM

I drove to Titusville - 2 hrs. Well worth it! Just AWSUME! Back home in McClure at 4:05.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/mg1vnmjmbu...aunch.MOV?dl=0

Bilyclub 11-17-2022 05:33 AM

Didn't see anything and I usually do. The cloud cover was pretty thick.

racedaygal 11-17-2022 06:18 AM

Artemis
 
1 Attachment(s)
Lucky enough to get this one picture, then it went in the clouds.

b0bd0herty 11-17-2022 06:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoPAA (Post 2158027)
I ran out to see it a couple of minutes after launch time, and I don’t know if I was too late or if it was too cloudy, I couldn’t see anything.

It was visible for perhaps 30 seconds. Horizon brightened, then the exhaust almost immediately into clouds.

txfan 11-17-2022 06:57 AM

Space Launch System Liftoff occurred at 1:47:44 am EST on a 70 degree azimuth inclined 34 degrees (slightly northeast - 28.5 is due east).

NASA official photos can be viewed/downloaded here:

Flickr

Darlene Lansing 11-17-2022 08:18 AM

Thank you

midiwiz 11-17-2022 08:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoPAA (Post 2158027)
I ran out to see it a couple of minutes after launch time, and I don’t know if I was too late or if it was too cloudy, I couldn’t see anything.

the launch time changed to 1:47:44am and yes it was visible here not much due to the cloud cover but at least about 15 seconds.... however for those of us that took the time to go over to the coast I can tell you the launch was well worth the wait. Simply AMAZING! It was better than the Shuttle launches

Vermilion Villager 11-17-2022 09:43 AM

Very large orange glow on the base of the clouds, then you could see the plume for about 20 seconds before disappearing into the clouds. Got glimpses of it thru the thin layers of clouds until it was too far away to see.

pauld315 11-17-2022 10:14 AM

Honestly, if SpaceX had managed this instead of NASA, it would have launched months ago and spent a lot less money to do so. NASA has now awarded SpaceX the future Artemis missions to the moon

slg0921 11-17-2022 11:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pauld315 (Post 2158298)
Honestly, if SpaceX had managed this instead of NASA, it would have launched months ago and spent a lot less money to do so. NASA has now awarded SpaceX the future Artemis missions to the moon

SpaceX will provide the landing system from the lunar gateway to the moon's surface, but the Orion capsules will still be launched to orbit on Artemis rockets.

Whitley 11-18-2022 10:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoPAA (Post 2158027)
I ran out to see it a couple of minutes after launch time, and I don’t know if I was too late or if it was too cloudy, I couldn’t see anything.

Yes, I saw it. It was amazing. There was a delay of about 30 minutes from the original launch. Artemis was brighter and visible for a longer period than the SpaceX rockets I watch. I watched Artemis from Sarasota and had a view of it for about 6 minutes . At first that deep red/orange. After the initial rockets dropped a bright white pulsating light.

Whitley 11-18-2022 10:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pauld315 (Post 2158298)
Honestly, if SpaceX had managed this instead of NASA, it would have launched months ago and spent a lot less money to do so. NASA has now awarded SpaceX the future Artemis missions to the moon

It really is not a fair comparison as they are much different (Artemis vs SpaceX Falcons, BUT
The Falcon's cost 67 million per launch, Artemis cost 876 million.

mrf0151 11-18-2022 12:43 PM

YouTube video is awesome:

https://youtu.be/xlo1xQneAEA

larbud 11-19-2022 01:48 PM

Artemis
 
1 Attachment(s)
104 sec exposure,Took awhile to clear the clouds. I apparently bumped tripod during the delay.🤬


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