The SLS rocket is going to be used on a mission to the moon.
There are contents.
After several postponements due to technical issues and severe weather systems, NASA will attempt to launch the rocket from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday morning.
The Artemis I mission will see the world's most powerful rocket send an uncrewed spaceship on a flyby of the moon, marking the beginning of a new era of space exploration.
The schedule was set out by NASA.
#Artemis I is launching to the Moon!
Nov. 15:3:30pm ET (2030 UTC): Tanking coverage
10:30pm ET (0330 UTC): Launch broadcast
Nov. 16:8:30am ET (1330 UTC): Trajectory burn
10am ET (1500 UTC): Earth views from @NASA_Orion
Stay tuned: https://t.co/sQWu67xTPq pic.twitter.com/srAEMfTQ63
— NASA (@NASA) November 14, 2022
There will be live coverage of tanking operations. The time is 1 pm There will be a show on Tuesday, November 15th.
The full launch coverage will start at 10:30pm. The time is 7:30p.m. The liftoff is set for 1:04 a.m. on Tuesday. The time is 10:00 p.m. on Wednesday. On Tuesday
A bunch of cameras on the ground and on the rocket itself will cover the launch from multiple angles as the 98-meter- tall SLS vehicle lights up the Florida sky on its way to space Commentators will talk viewers through the early stages of the flight, including the deployment of the Orion spaceship, which will make its way to the moon before returning for a splashdown landing in December.
There will be spectacular Earth views from cameras on Orion later in the day.
A successful Artemis I mission will pave the way for Artemis II with a crew on board. Artemis III wants to put a woman and a person of color on the moon.