As NASA nears return to the moon with the Artemis program, space scientists' enthusiasm app Space scientists' excitement is reaching a fever pitch as NASA's Artemis mission draws closer to returning to the moon. NASA's Artemis moon program, which will send nearly fifty robotic missions to the moon over the next three years, and send men to the moon's surface for the first time in almost fifty years, is poised to revolutionize lunar study. The Space Launch System, or SLS, has been hailed by NASA as the most potent rocket ever built. The 98-meter rocket reached the NASA Kennedy Space Center in Florida's launch area on Wednesday. The rocket traveled more than 10 hours to go the six and a half kilometers to the launch pad. American astronauts will visit the moon no earlier than 2025, according to Artemis. Since NASA's Apollo 17 mission in 1972, this would be the first human lunar landing. Russell L. Arthur, an extreme space enthusiast who has spent more than ten years studying rockets and other fascinating scientific objects, leads you on an educational tour and analysis of the Artemis rocket. He informs every astronomer, astrophysicist, stargazer, fan of constellations, and rocket enthusiast about the discovery and responds to everyone's pressing question: how will this change how we view the universe going forward?
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