@LouSasssol@MlIkyyy@spacebrandonb https://t.co/x5eq2j5yBe
Have to come vindicate this guy now that they released the HD footage cos it turns out both cameras were in fact real. It was highly unfortunate ps2 ass video quality, bad signal and cutaway timing on the livestream that made it look like a simulation ๐ข๐
POV: Youโre coming home after a journey around the Moon. ๐
Before reentering Earthโs atmosphere at the end of Artemis II, the Orion spacecraftโs crew module โ carrying the astronauts โ separated from the service module that provided propulsion and power throughout the mission.
@LouSasssol@MlIkyyy@spacebrandonb Good question. Computer visuals are almost always included in mission livestreams. They're often simulations animated by live telemetry data from the spacecraft. If there is a live feed, sometimes the signal goes out. You might even see simulations get wonky due to bad signal too
@face_a_masta@DeffGeff@NASA If you tried to resolve stars in the background while looking at the day side of Earth the entire shot would be washed out into a blank white screen ๐ You can see stars (and Venus!) in Reid Weisman's 1/4-sec exposure photo of Earth in moonlight during departure tho
@LouSasssol@MlIkyyy@spacebrandonb No worries I already did๐ Btw, just in case you haven't seen it yet, here's a clip with the real footage . It's pretty cool imo (:
@John_Henry_NC@NASA in its entirety <- part missing from nasa post. at its furthest Apollo 13 reached 150-odd miles above the far side of the moon, too close to see everything at once the way Artemis is doing now
@hidden_whale@bilawalsidhu I see you gettin bodied by people who didn't fully get what you were saying. FWIW, I understood :) P.S. We might be getting closer to the onset of Kessler syndrome than previously predicted...
@jifferey He's not even close to actually aiming at anyone in this screenshot if you go back over the clip. Also lines up with him readjusting his mouse
@TheRealShawnBB@LuisMiranda4D@Geiger_Capital@LPDonovan you would not know this -- not every square meter of a front line is highly active . ukranian soldiers are taught in as close to combat conditions as is reasonable because This is experience, it produces a good soldier . "meat shield" does not factor in to such a strategy