'We go for all humanity' - emotional moment as rocket launches
'We go for all humanity' - emotional moment as Artemis II blasts off Nasa's Artemis II mission thundered away from Florida's coast, taking its four crew members on their historic journey to circle the Moon. There was a deep rumbling as a sheet of brilliant white flame suddenly erupted, momentarily engulfing the whole launch pad as the mightiest rocket Nasa has ever built rose into the sky.
8km) away from the launch pad.
There was no weakness, and SLS arced out over the Atlantic like a fiery white angel, leaving a white smoky trail as the sound subsided and the spacecraft disappeared from view, shrinking to a single bright star as it chased the Moon.
Afterwards, there was a giddy euphoria among staff at the Kennedy Space Center.
There is still work to do, but for now they are bathing in the moment of triumph.
In the hour before take-off there were issues which threatened the launch.
The countdown clock was held at 10 minutes while engineers resolved the problem.
They worked quickly, but it was an agonising wait to see if the launch could still go ahead.
Then came the staccato rhythm of the calls by each engineer responsible for the rocket's critical systems: "booster, go", "GNC, go", "range, go" – each reply, a tiny release of tension and a build-up of expectation.
"You are go for launch," she told the crew. "We go for all humanity", Commander Reid Wiseman responded. Cheesy words in normal circumstances, but that was the moment our spines began to tingle and we knew we were about to witness history.
Today, the centre was back in business, doing what it was made for.
The press corps headed outside, where clouds that had threatened to cancel the launch had evaporated. As the countdown clock restarted, the atmosphere turned to electric anticipation.
The four RS 25 engines and twin solid rocket boosters lit up, driving more than 8.
8 million pounds of thrust into the Florida evening sky. "God Speed Artemis II" Blackwell-Thompson said in another echo from the past.
I have been lucky enough to see launches of the Space Shuttle to the International Space Station from the Kennedy Space Center. Those launches are almost as impressive in flight, surging into space with an enormous bang and rising at the speed of a bullet.
Our discussion came at a time when the dream of human space travel seemed to be over.
I asked him whatever happened to that dream?
He smiled and said "the reality may have faded but the dream is still there and it will come back in time"
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