Context:
NASA’s Artemis II mission set a new record by sending astronauts 4,06,771 km away from Earth, surpassing Apollo 13, using a free-return trajectory to ensure safety and efficiency.
Key Highlights:
- Mission Achievement
- Farthest human travel: 406,771 km from Earth.
- Surpassed Apollo 13 (400,171 km, 1970).
- First crewed lunar mission since 1972.
- Mission Design
- Flyby mission (no landing) to test Orion spacecraft.
- Orion traveled around the far side of the Moon.
- Free-Return Trajectory
- Uses Moon’s gravity to return spacecraft to Earth.
- Enhances crew safety and fuel efficiency.
- Two-Phase Flight Plan
- High-Earth Orbit:
- Elliptical orbit extending ~74,000 km
- ~42 hours for system checks
- Lunar Slingshot:
- Spacecraft travels ~10,300 km beyond Moon
- Gravity redirects it back to Earth
- Mission Objectives
- Test life-support systems in deep space
- Validate Orion spacecraft and European Service Module
- Provide telemetry data for future lunar missions
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Free-Return Trajectory:
- Orbit using gravitational forces to return spacecraft automatically
- Lunar Slingshot:
- Use of Moon’s gravity to alter trajectory and speed
- Orion Spacecraft:
- NASA’s deep-space crew vehicle under Artemis program
- Telemetry:
- Transmission of data from spacecraft to Earth
- Artemis Program:
- NASA’s initiative to return humans to the Moon and build a Moon base
Relevant Mains Points:
- Advancement in Space Technology:
- Demonstrates deep-space human mission capability
- Strengthens global progress toward lunar exploration
- Strategic Importance:
- Space exploration linked to technological leadership and geopolitics
- Potential for international collaboration
- Safety and Efficiency Innovations:
- Free-return trajectory minimizes risk of mission failure
- Reduces fuel requirements → cost efficiency
- Future Prospects:
- Enables Moon base development
- Gateway for Mars missions and deep-space exploration
- Way Forward:
- Enhance international cooperation in space missions
- Invest in advanced propulsion and life-support systems
- Promote space research and private sector participation
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 3: Science & Technology (Space)
