The European Space Agency (ESA) has released a time-lapse video showing the rollout of the Artemis II moon rocket to its launchpad, underscoring Europe’s contribution to the joint lunar mission with NASA. The footage compresses the roughly 12-hour transfer from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launchpad 39B into just over 90 seconds.
The video also offers rare views inside the Vehicle Assembly Building, one of the world’s largest structures, standing about 160 metres tall with a volume of around 3.7 million cubic metres. The scale of the building emphasizes the size of NASA’s Space Launch System rocket assembled inside.
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While NASA provides the launcher, ESA is supplying the European Service Module, a critical component mounted beneath the Orion crew capsule. The module will provide propulsion, power, water and life-support systems during the mission, making ESA branding clearly visible on the spacecraft. “This powerhouse sits directly below the Orion capsule, supplying the crew with electricity, water, air, and the necessary propulsion for the course to the Moon,” ESA said.
In reality, the rocket is transported by a crawler-transporter that moves at a maximum speed of about 1.6 km per hour along the 6.5-km route to the pad. The vehicle, in service since 1965, has previously carried numerous rockets and space shuttles.
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With the rollout complete, preparations are entering a decisive phase ahead of launch. Artemis II is expected to send four astronauts on a 10-day flyby of the Moon, marking the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit in about half a century, with launch opportunities currently targeted from February and potentially as late as April.
Source: ESA
