@@eleanorforbes1551 You definitely should be. Congrats for you, your husband and the whole team as well. I’m already looking forward to Artemis 2! All the best and cheers from Brazil! Go NASA!
@@kevinconrad7648 yes, for some of Artemis 2. Most likely for that launch he’ll be back room support to allow his protege Jacob to be on console. But all of that has to be determined by the higher ups at a time of their choosing
4:17 hahaha NEVER SEEN THAT BEFORE! No countdown. No "Ignition Sequence Start"-stuff. Nothing. Just "Liftoff confirmed." As if it surprises everyone. Would be interesting how NASA controls/sequences SLS? Is there anything left resembling a "Launch Button" in any way or form or is it just screens and keyboards? 👍
You are thinking of launch control commentary. Watch the actual launch broadcast for that lol. Same as Apollo all the commentary you heard was from Kennedy, not Houston
The countdown is recited by the Public Affairs Officer (PAO). There's one at the Kennedy Space Center for pre-launch and lift-off, and one in Houston that takes over after the rocket clears the tower. During the Apollo program Jack King (The Voice of Apollo) was the PAO at the Launch Control Center in Florida and Paul Haney (The Voice of Mission Control) was the PAO at the Mission Control Center in Houston. The controllers in Florida and Houston don't hear that countdown. Had there been a crew on board, maybe the CAPCOM (Spacecraft Communicator) would countdown for the crew, as it was done in Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo. But, I doubt it since I've never heard a CAPCOM do a countdown during the shuttle program.
Amazing to see that level of professionalism. Wonder what they were like once they left their stations
Very professional. All of the emotion of a head of lettuce.
01:04 That guy is happy!
4:18 Liftoff confirmed
Have a happy merry Christmas and a happy new year my friends
Watching from India
Me too
Hindi aati hai?
Hello NASA and NDASA everyone.🌞🌞🌞🌞🌞🙏
Very, very cool.
@BastienLye ...exhausted, wanting to sleep before next console shift. My husband is FDO for launch, Brian Perry.
Cool!
@@henrique2678 So proud of him and the whole team. Also splashdown of Orion was picture perfect. GO NASA!
@@eleanorforbes1551 You definitely should be. Congrats for you, your husband and the whole team as well. I’m already looking forward to Artemis 2! All the best and cheers from Brazil! Go NASA!
@@eleanorforbes1551 Will he be working Artemis 2 or any other missions?
@@kevinconrad7648 yes, for some of Artemis 2. Most likely for that launch he’ll be back room support to allow his protege Jacob to be on console. But all of that has to be determined by the higher ups at a time of their choosing
I've never seen thise headsets anywhere else .
What are they ?
4:17 hahaha NEVER SEEN THAT BEFORE! No countdown. No "Ignition Sequence Start"-stuff. Nothing. Just "Liftoff confirmed." As if it surprises everyone.
Would be interesting how NASA controls/sequences SLS? Is there anything left resembling a "Launch Button" in any way or form or is it just screens and keyboards?
👍
Launch is controlled via the Firing Room at Kennedy. This is Mission Control, who assume command after the vehicle clears the tower.
It was the same with Shuttle, MCC did not verbally count down the launch sequence
Even with Apollo the Saturn V computer and the ground logic/computers control the ignition and launch. No launch button(s).
You are thinking of launch control commentary. Watch the actual launch broadcast for that lol. Same as Apollo all the commentary you heard was from Kennedy, not Houston
The countdown is recited by the Public Affairs Officer (PAO). There's one at the Kennedy Space Center for pre-launch and lift-off, and one in Houston that takes over after the rocket clears the tower. During the Apollo program Jack King (The Voice of Apollo) was the PAO at the Launch Control Center in Florida and Paul Haney (The Voice of Mission Control) was the PAO at the Mission Control Center in Houston. The controllers in Florida and Houston don't hear that countdown. Had there been a crew on board, maybe the CAPCOM (Spacecraft Communicator) would countdown for the crew, as it was done in Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo. But, I doubt it since I've never heard a CAPCOM do a countdown during the shuttle program.
They lost data?
2:24 should be “ascent abort pyros armed”.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍👍👍from Brazil
Hello, am I not Mr. Prayut? Chan Ocha
They are dressed up like business men or for a celebration 🎉
Professionla attire!
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