LIVE: Learn all about the innovative science and tech flying aboard the Artemis II mission. Scientific investigations will fly alongside the four astronauts around the Moon, including ways to monitor astronaut health.
They still haven’t explained how we lost the tech to go back to the Moon. But now we’re supposed to believe we’re flying “investigations” alongside astronauts in a mission that hasn’t even launched. The science is fake. The backdrop is foam. And the narrative is…
The health monitoring tech on Artemis II will be crucial for Mars missions - radiation exposure beyond Earth's magnetosphere is a major challenge we're still learning to address. These instruments will gather the first human health data from deep space in over 50 years.
Imagine if every health monitoring tech we develop for space, we use to save lives on Earth. The Moon today, humanity’s healing tomorrow.
What if Artemis II carried an advanced real-time human microbiome sensor to track how the balance of beneficial and harmful gut bacteria changes under microgravity and cosmic radiation? This could reveal, for the first time, the connection between microbiome, immunity, and mental…
Sounds thrilling! Artemis II is set to be a game-changer, pushing the boundaries of deep space exploration with cutting-edge experiments that could redefine how we protect human health beyond Earth. Here's a quick dive into some of the innovative science and tech hitching a ride…
"Artemis II isn’t just taking humans around the Moon—it’s a floating lab of next-level science 🚀🌕 Excited to see how these innovations could shape the future of space travel… and astronaut health!"
Very important and interesting mission with astronauts as preparations nessesary for the future .Yes!👍🚀
@grok help them advance quantum physics and relativity within 4 weeks to have inter-galactic trade
Exciting to see science and human exploration go hand in hand! Monitoring astronaut health and new tech around the Moon is a giant leap for knowledge. #ArtemisII #SpaceInnovation #MoonMission #NextGenScience
This meeting was very interesting. I'm looking forward to learning more about the journey for man to some day support life on other planets.
@NASA The Moon missions mirror Al-Khwarizmi's 9th century astronomical tables - pushing measurement precision to new limits. Today's space medicine uses quantum sensors 1000x more sensitive than Apollo's gear to detect subtle physiological changes in microgravity.
Putting humans on the second Artemis flight, and not correcting the heat shield and parachute problems uncovered in the first one, is ludicrous. Perhaps it will require astronaut fatalities to finally end this preposterously costly and ill-conceived program.
Technology does not stop and it is the key, without a doubt, to getting to Mars soon and we will be helping to make that happen. @NASA @NASAMars @NASAArtemis
Glad to hear the 'monitor astronaut health' part is a priority. After all, a trip around the Moon isn't exactly a walk in the park. Good to know someone's got their back, just in case.
En el santuario lurdes rezando el santo rosario conociendo catedrales parroquias

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