NASA Repairs Helium Flow Issue that Caused Artemis II Rollback
5 Articles
5 Articles
NASA will allow the public to follow in real time the Artemis II mission, in which four astronauts will travel around the Moon aboard the Orion ship.The agency made available the Artemis Real-time Orbit Website (AROW), which shows the location of the ship during the flight, its distance to the Earth, the distance to the Moon and the duration of the mission.The tool will be available on the NASA website and the agency's mobile app.The system will…
NASA Artemis II Moon Mission: "For All Humanity"
NASA Artemis II Moon Mission: "For All Humanity" | Latest Updates"Four astronauts. One historic journey. Moonbound: For All Humanity follows the paths of the Artemis II crew as they prepare to journey around the Moon and back home. This is where the next chapter of human exploration begins."Launch is expected by April 2026.Updates: With NASA’s Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft in the Vehicle Assembly Building at th…
Artemis II Lunar Mission grounded due to helium leak
NASA postponed the launch of Artemis II once again, with a new launch window for April. The launch was initially scheduled for March 6, but a helium leak in the rocket caused further delays. While preparations were underway for the launch, NASA says it ran into an issue with the flow of helium to the
What caused the Artemis II rollback?
Teams traced the problem to a blocked helium feed Engineers investigating the Artemis II stack discovered a blockage in a helium flow system that forced the rocket off the launch pad and back to the Vehicle Assembly Building. The helium lines are part of the ground‑support plumbing that conditions…
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