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NASA’s Orion spacecraft has snapped a magnificent selfie, prior to making its first close approach of the moon today.
The high-resolution photo, captured on Friday, shows the cone-shaped crew module horizontally as it makes its journey to our celestial neighbour.
Orion took the selfie using a camera mounted on its solar array wing during a routine external inspection of the spacecraft on the third day of the Artemis I mission.
It’s already snapped a stunning ‘blue marble’ image of Earth nine hours into its epic journey.
After launching last Wednesday, Orion is set to start its first lunar flyby today at 7:44 EST (12:44 GMT), with its closest approach scheduled for 7:57 EST (12:57 GMT).
At this time, the unmanned spacecraft will pass about 80 miles (128km) above the lunar surface, according to NASA.
A celestial selfie! NASA’s Orion spacecraft snaps a photo of itself as it prepares to pass behind the moon this morning
NASA’s next-generation moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion crew capsule, lifts off from launch complex 39-B for the uncrewed Artemis I mission to the moon, at Cape Canaveral, Florida, November 16, 2022
Engineers expect to lose communication with the spacecraft as is passes behind the Moon for approximately 34 minutes from 07:26 EST (12:26 GMT).
The public can track Orion during its mission around the Moon and back in real-time, using NASA’s interactive online tool.
NASA posted the selfie to Twitter with the caption: ‘Just days from reaching the Moon, the @NASA_Orion spacecraft captured this selfie while flying through space.
‘The #Artemis I mission is preparing us to bring astronauts to the Moon.’
Artemis I is NASA’s uncrewed flight test of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft, which launched last Wednesday from Kennedy Space Center on Merritt Island, Florida.
Artemis I is designed to show that the SLS and Orion capsule are ready to carry astronauts to the moon in subsequent Artemis II and Artemis III missions.
If the mission is successful, Artemis I will be followed by a human trip around the moon in 2024 (Artemis II) and could lead to the first woman and first person of colour landing on the moon the year after.
Mike Sarafin, head of the Artemis I mission, said on Friday that the Orion spacecraft is ‘exceeding performance expectations’.
Orion is already around 200,000 miles (320,000 km) from Earth and preparing to perform the first of four main engine thrusts scheduled during the mission.
This maneuver will bring the spacecraft as close as 80 miles (130km) from the lunar surface, in order to take advantage of the Moon’s gravitational force.
Since this will take place on the far side of the Moon, NASA is expected to lose contact with the spacecraft for approximately 35 minutes.
‘We will be passing over some of the Apollo landing sites,’ said flight director Jeff Radigan, although they will be in darkness.
Four days later, a second thrust from the engines will place Orion in a distant orbit around the Moon.
It will then begin the journey back to Earth, with a landing in the Pacific Ocean scheduled for December 11, after just 25 days of flight.
The Space Launch System (SLS) rocket will carry the Orion capsule to space for its 25-and-a-half day journey around the moon and then a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on December 11
This image shows a view of the NASA Orion spacecraft, on its way to the moon with Earth (a ‘blue marble’) in the background
Sarafin also said that 10 scientific micro-satellites had been deployed when the rocket took off, but that half of them were experiencing technical or communication problems.
Those experiments, carried out separately by independent teams, will have no impact on the main mission, however.
Artemis I is not a manned mission, meaning there are no humans aboard the Orion capsule.
However, Orion does have three manikins on board – two resembling a female body (Helga and Zohar) and one a male body (Campos).
Campos – named after Arturo Campos, an electrical engineer for NASA in the 1970s – is occupying the commander’s seat during the Artemis I mission while wearing the new Orion Crew Survival System flight suit.
Campos is equipped with two radiation sensors and have additional sensors under its headrest and behind its seat to record acceleration and vibration data throughout the mission.
In the passenger seats meanwhile are Helga and Zohar, on board as part of an important study into the risks of space radiation for real women astronauts in the near future.
Helga and Zohar have ’tissue-equivalent materials of variable density’ that replicate the proportions of a woman’s body, including bone and soft tissue.
Helga will fly unprotected to the Moon, while Zohar (top) will wear a newly developed radiation protection vest, called the AstroRad
Sensors have been fitted in the most radiation-sensitive areas of their ‘bodies’ – chest, stomach, uterus and bone marrow.
Helga is flying unprotected to the Moon, while Zohar wears a newly developed radiation protection vest, called the AstroRad, which is made of polyethylene to better block harmful protons in space.
By comparing the two sets of data, it will be possible to determine the extent to which the vest could protect an astronaut from harmful radiation exposure.
They are not the first space manikins; a phantom called Matroshka, developed by the DLR Institute of Aerospace Medicine in Cologne, was deployed on the ISS between 2004 and 2011.
NASA’s Official Flight Kit list of items for Artemis I also includes 245 silver Snoopy pins, a Dead Sea pebble, 567 American flags and a Shaun the Sheep mascot.
The British stop-motion character, a star of the Wallace and Gromit series, is meant to represent the UK and the European Space Agency (ESA) on the flight.
Shaun has his own spin-off TV series and appeared in his own children’s sci-fi film ‘A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon’ in 2019.
Ahead of the launch of Artemis I, NASA revealed a list of items it will be sending on its journey to the Earth’s natural satellite, including a Shaun the Sheep mascot (pictured)