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Launch Of Artemis Moon Mission Kicks Off A New ‘Space Age’

In the coming days, SpaceX will likely launch a rocket into outer space. In one sense, that isn’t a new development, but it may still come as news to the American people.

The launch of the Artemis mission, which could happen as soon as Wednesday evening, will take a manned crew around the moon for the first time in over half a century and will draw interest from the press and the public worldwide. This particularly prominent launch will highlight the ways in which the private sector has not only assumed control of launching manned missions into space but also revitalized a space program some may have considered moribund.

Witness to History

The postponement of an earlier Artemis launch window in February due to technical problems meant I had the opportunity to witness a separate rocket launch from the Kennedy Space Center. The Artemis postponement allowed SpaceX to accelerate the launch of Crew 12, a manned mission to the International Space Station, which came after a medical emergency led Crew 11 to return to Earth sooner than planned.

If watching a rocket launch in person isn’t on your personal “bucket list,” it should be. I had the good fortune not just to be in Florida during the Crew 12 mission’s (accelerated) launch window, but to snag a ticket to a nighttime launch early in the morning of Feb. 13. 

The impressions from that night remain etched in my memory: the Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft bathed in spotlights and silhouetted against the black of the night sky. The brilliant flash of light as the engines fired the rocket skyward, the “oohs” and “aahs” of the crowd, accompanied by the quiet click-click-click of amateur photographers’ shutters. And then and only then — because light travels faster than sound — the rumble and roar of the engines reached our vantage point, as the rocket surged ever higher into the heavens.

Crew 12 launch at night