South African agency tracks historic Artemis II lunar flyby

South African National Space Agency engineers at Hartebeesthoek Ground Station tracked NASA's Orion spacecraft during its record-breaking lunar flyby, ensuring communication during key phases. The Artemis II crew achieved a maximum distance from Earth of 406,771km, surpassing previous human spaceflight records. Sansa provided telemetry and ranging data as part of global collaboration.

The Artemis II mission completed a seven-hour lunar flyby on April 6, marking humanity's first crewed return to the Moon region since Apollo 17 in 1972. The Orion spacecraft, carrying four NASA astronauts, passed within 6,545km of the lunar surface during a 40-minute loss of signal behind the Moon's far side. Two minutes after closest approach, the crew reached 406,771km from Earth, breaking the previous record for human spaceflight distance.

At Sansa's Hartebeesthoek Ground Station, the largest in the southern hemisphere and Africa, a team used two antennas—one from 1963 and one from 1988—to track the capsule when visible due to Earth's rotation. Raoul Hodges, Sansa Space Science executive director, said: “The module with the four astronauts needs its health to be monitored constantly. We bring that information down. Lots of information – telemetric data.” Sansa Chief Engineer Eugene Avenant noted preparations ensured antenna health and precise Doppler measurements using caesium or hydrogen maser clocks.

Data was relayed to a third party, not directly to NASA, with Sansa contracted for the support. Hodges described it as “a huge team effort to get the spacecraft into space and to get the astronauts back safely.”

Crew members observed lunar features, an Earthset and Earthrise, and a solar eclipse, reporting six meteoroid impacts. Commander Reid Wiseman said the crew “saw sights that no human has ever seen.” The mission is set to splash down off San Diego on April 10 at 2.07am South African time.

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Dramatic liftoff of NASA's SLS rocket carrying Artemis II astronauts on the first crewed lunar flyby mission in over 50 years.
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Misi Artemis II NASA luncurkan empat astronaut dalam misi terbang lintas Bulan berawak pertama dalam lebih dari 50 tahun

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Misi Artemis II NASA berhasil lepas landas pada 1 April 2026 dari Kennedy Space Center di Florida, mengirim astronaut Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, dan Jeremy Hansen di dalam pesawat ruang angkasa Orion untuk misi terbang lintas Bulan berawak pertama sejak Apollo 17. Didorong oleh roket Space Launch System (SLS), uji coba penerbangan selama 10 hari ini akan memvalidasi sistem penting untuk pendaratan Bulan di masa depan serta misi ke Mars, dengan mengitari sisi jauh Bulan.

58 tahun setelah orbit lunar Apollo 8, NASA siap meluncurkan Artemis II, terbang berawak yang akan membawa astronot lebih jauh dari Bumi daripada sebelumnya. Misi ini akan menguji teknologi kunci untuk pendaratan lunar masa depan dan menandai langkah menuju basis bulan permanen. Awak, yang saat ini dalam karantina, mencakup komandan Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, dan spesialis misi Christina Koch dan Jeremy Hansen.

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Awak misi Artemis II NASA menjadi manusia pertama dalam lebih dari 50 tahun yang mengelilingi sisi jauh bulan pada 6 April, melakukan perjalanan lebih jauh dari Bumi dibandingkan siapa pun sebelumnya. Para astronot menangkap pemandangan yang belum pernah dilihat sebelumnya, termasuk gambar jarak dekat kawah dan gerhana matahari yang unik. Mereka kini sedang dalam perjalanan kembali untuk melakukan pendaratan air di lepas pantai California pada 10 April.

Misi Artemis II NASA maju dengan kedatangan roket Space Launch System dan pesawat Orion ke Launch Pad 39B di Kennedy Space Center. Pengangkutan malam hari menandai langkah krusial menuju penerbangan Artemis berawak pertama, yang dijadwalkan mengorbit Bulan. Para insinyur kini bersiap untuk uji praluncuran menjelang pengiriman empat astronot dalam perjalanan 10 hari.

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Four astronauts are heading to the Moon for the first time in over 50 years. The crew launched at 18:35 local time from Cape Canaveral, Florida, aboard the Orion capsule atop the Space Launch System. The mission builds on Artemis 1 and sets milestones for women and non-white astronauts.

The US space agency NASA is set to launch its Artemis II mission today, sending astronauts to orbit the moon for the first time in over 50 years. Four astronauts from the US and Canada will undertake a test flight lasting about ten days. Germany provides the key European Service Module for the Orion spacecraft via the European Space Agency.

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NASA's Artemis II mission, with four astronauts aboard, completed a Moon flyby and is returning to Earth after breaking distance records. Two Colombian engineers, Liliana Villarreal and Diana Trujillo, lead key ground operations. Villarreal oversees landing and recovery, while Trujillo manages flight control.

 

 

 

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