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La tripulación de Artemis II habla desde el espacio
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00:01Integrity Houston, you ready for the event?
00:09Houston Integrity, we are ready for the event.
00:14ABC News, this is Mission Control Houston. Please call Integrity for a voice check.
00:21Integrity, this is Gio Benitez at ABC News. How do you hear me?
00:28Great. Outstanding. We have you loud and clear. How about us?
00:33I hear you loud and clear, and I truly cannot believe it.
00:37You are quite literally on the way to the moon right now and still speaking with us.
00:42Tell me, how do you feel? What's going through your mind?
00:45I mean, this must be so incredible because have you allowed the weight of the moment to really fit in
00:52here?
00:52Have you allowed that to happen?
00:56Do you allow that to happen?
00:59Well, first and foremost, we all wanted to give a shout out to our families first because we are pretty
01:03far from Earth and we have not gotten to say hi to them yet.
01:06But there was a moment about an hour ago where Mission Control Houston reoriented our spacecraft as the sun was
01:14setting behind the Earth.
01:15And I don't know what we all expected to see in that moment, but you could see the entire globe
01:19from pole to pole.
01:20You could see Africa, Europe, and if you looked really close, you could see the northern lights.
01:27It was the most spectacular moment, and it paused all four of us in our tracks.
01:33What has been most surprising to you about this so far?
01:43Well, I think probably one of the things that surprised all of us is when those solid rocket boosters actually
01:48lit and we left the pad.
01:50It was just a moment of disbelief and, yeah, the fact that we launched, it just totally takes you by
01:58surprise, even though you're expecting it, at least for me anyway.
02:00And I just had a huge smile across my face.
02:06Did it feel different?
02:08Because I can imagine that's such a powerful rocket that must have felt different for you.
02:17One of the biggest surprises was how smooth riding those solids was.
02:21We all expected a really just dynamic ride, a lot of motion.
02:25We were prepared to potentially not being able to see telemetry, maybe even not being able to, you know, touch
02:32switches, and it was very smooth.
02:35It was a definite difference when they separated, and we were just on the main engines, but just a steady
02:42rumble and a great ride.
02:46What do you want to tell Americans here at home who are watching this right now?
02:50They're quite amazed at the fact that you are speaking to us on the way to the moon right now.
02:55What do you want to tell them about this particular mission and why it's so important?
03:08First and foremost, I would just like to say thank you.
03:11Your support and trust in us has enabled this and so many people that have worked for so long to
03:17make this possible.
03:18But also, we're just getting started.
03:20You know, we've worked really hard, and even though we were a little surprised to actually launch yesterday,
03:24we have a lot of mission left ahead of us, and so I really want to tell them to stay
03:28tuned and keep tabs on what's going on.
03:31NASA is doing a great job of communicating all the things to come.
03:36I can't even tell you how many cheers were there on the ground.
03:39I was there watching you all lift off from the Kennedy Space Center, and everyone was so excited, so happy,
03:46and that was just incredible.
03:47Jeremy, I know this is your first time in space, and you're surrounded by all of these space vets.
03:53What's it been like for you that this is your first mission there?
04:02There has been a tremendous amount of disbelief for me.
04:06It's just so extraordinary.
04:09I just kept saying to them yesterday, like, I really like it up here.
04:14I wish I could have got here sooner.
04:16It's just such a tremendous place to be.
04:18The views are extraordinary.
04:20It's really fun to be floating around, and it just makes me feel like a little kid.
04:28I heard that there was a little bit of an issue with the toilet.
04:31Which one of you was the plumber?
04:38I'll take that one.
04:39I'm the space plumber.
04:40I'm proud to call myself the space plumber.
04:43I like to say that it is probably the most important piece of equipment on board, so we were all
04:49breathing a sigh of relief when it turned out to be just fine.
04:52It was just an issue, I think, of sitting for a long time and needing a little time to warm
04:55up, a priming issue.
04:57But we did originally think that there could have been potentially something fouling up the motor, and luckily, we are
05:04all systems go.
05:07Oh, well, I'm sure I could see the faces right there.
05:10Y'all are very happy about that.
05:11I see that you're very cozy in there.
05:13It's tight quarters, but it was also a little chilly, I heard.
05:24It is quite cold, and, you know, we're wishing we had the lower-temperature sleeping bags with us.
05:31But right before this PAO event started, I pulled my knit cap off, and I'm ready to put it back
05:36on.
05:37But Houston's been working with us to change fan speeds and temperature set points, and we've actually been able to
05:42warm it up a lot better in the last half a day or so.
05:46Our last nap before TLI, we got a lot more comfortable.
05:51Well, that's a really interesting question.
05:53How is it that you take a nap in there?
05:56What does sleeping even look like?
06:07Well, let's see.
06:08So we've been off the planet for, what, about 30 hours now, and we've had two very short naps.
06:12We actually just gathered for our first meal together in space.
06:15That is how busy we have been the last day and a half.
06:18It has been really an amazing beginning flight plan.
06:22But sleeping here is actually sort of comical.
06:25Christina has been sleeping heads down in the middle of the vehicle, kind of like a bat suspended from our
06:30docking tunnel.
06:31Victor's been up where Jeremy is right now.
06:33He's got a nice little nook wedged in there.
06:35And then Jeremy has been stretched out on seat one, and I've been sleeping under the displays just in case
06:41anything goes wrong.
06:42It's more comfortable than you would think.
06:45And it's nice to sleep in weightlessness again.
06:48Every time I was dozing off last night, I had that image that I was tripping off a curb, and
06:52I was waking myself up.
06:53So my body's getting re-acclimated.
06:55It's been a few years since I've been up here.
06:59I've heard it's the best sleep up in space.
07:01Do you feel the weight of history knowing that you're going to be traveling farther than any other human?
07:19You know, it's a remarkable thing.
07:22You would think it would be weighty, but we just feel like we're lifted up by the team that supports
07:28us, and you just sort of execute the plan.
07:30A lot of people telling us how to work this and manage this vehicle, and a lot of great training.
07:37And you just kind of go step by step, which I think is pretty remarkable what this team can do,
07:42and it really highlights their excellence.
07:45And I think I just want to add, you know, we just got done our translunar injection burn, and it
07:48was pretty tense moments there.
07:51It was pretty tense moments there for a second.
07:53And when we got done that burn, we just kind of looked at each other as a crew.
07:57We have been to the moon before 1969, 1968 through 1972.
08:01It's been a long time since we've been back.
08:03And I got to tell you, there is nothing normal about this.
08:06Sending four humans 250,000 miles away is a Herculean effort, and we are now just realizing the gravity of
08:13that.
08:14Yeah, nothing normal about this.
08:16What are you most excited about once you get to the moon?
08:27Having just experienced incredible views of planet Earth and seeing the entire planet out the window in one pane,
08:37knowing that we're about to have some similar views of the moon in that same way is definitely getting me
08:43more excited for it.
08:44I knew that that is what we would see, but there's nothing that prepares you for the breathtaking aspect of
08:51seeing your home planet both lit up bright as day
08:55and also the moon glow on it at night with the beautiful beam of the sunset and knowing that we're
09:02going to get similar views of the moon.
09:04I'm just, I'm really excited for that.
09:06And then, of course, heading home.
09:08Right now, we're in our cruise phase outbound, but we'll be turning our sights back on our home planet shortly.
09:14Shorter probably.
09:15It's going to fly by, but we're just excited for both of those milestones.
09:20As you all know, there is so much division at home right now.
09:23What is it that you're feeling and what message do you want to send to the American people about what
09:27you're saying out that window?
09:35Well, the first thing I would say is trust us.
09:38You look amazing.
09:39You look beautiful.
09:40And from up here, you also look like one thing.
09:43You know, homo sapiens is all of us.
09:45No matter where you're from or, you know, what you look like, we're all one people.
09:50And so, you know, this mission, one of the things that's amazing about being around and just being an astronaut,
09:57you know, serving our countries at this time,
09:59is that we get to give ourselves a mission that we can hold on to to say, hey, look at
10:04what we did for the rest of our lives.
10:07You know, we call amazing things that humans do moonshots for a reason because this brought us together and showed
10:13us what we can do when we put,
10:15not just putting our differences aside, when we bring our differences together and use all the strengths to accomplish something
10:20great.
10:21And so this mission will give us one of those that we all can remember and hold on to for
10:26the rest of our days.
10:27And I hope I hope people will tune in and give us a chance.
10:32Integrity, what an honor to speak with you.
10:34Thank you so much.
10:42Thank you for being with us.
10:47Integrity, Integrity, this is Houston ACR.
10:49That concludes the ABC News portion of the event.
10:52Please stand by for a voice check from Fox News.
11:03Hey, 910, ready?
11:04Integrity, this is Trace Gallagher with Fox News.
11:06How do you hear me?
11:12Hey, Trace, we got you loud and clear.
11:14How about us?
11:16I've got you loud and clear.
11:18I want to explain to the audience that there is a four-second delay,
11:21so there'll be some pause between the questions and the answers.
11:24Congratulations.
11:25How does it feel to be the first humans to leave Earth's orbit in some 54 years?
11:33Is there a difference in Earth's orbit and being outside the orbit?
11:44Well, we are still technically at Earth's orbit, although we did just do our translunar injection
11:48burn, and so we are definitely 100% on our way to the moon.
11:52The lunar gravity will take over in a couple of days here and start pulling us around the
11:57far side.
11:58At the end of our translunar injection here about an hour and a half ago, we just really
12:02looked at each other, and I know the United States has done this 1968 through 1972, but
12:08it's just, this is unbelievable that we can put our minds to something and pull it off.
12:12This is an unbelievable technical accomplishment.
12:16Yeah, I mean, it really is unbelievable to us.
12:19We watched this thing.
12:20It was just this flawless launch, and it was unbelievable to watch, and what really fascinates
12:26me about this is that you, in a few days, will become the first humans to travel the farthest
12:35in space, more than anybody else has ever done.
12:38It took us a long time to get back here, and now we're about to exceed that.
12:41Is that a moment of pride?
12:44Is it a moment of history?
12:45How do we feel about that?
12:55It's great you brought that up.
12:56We were aware that we would pass that milestone if we happened to launch on this date.
13:01There were other days where we wouldn't have necessarily, so we are not necessarily a crew
13:06that lives on superlatives, but it is a milestone that's important.
13:10It's important that people can understand and wrap their heads around what is the latest
13:15in what we're doing?
13:16What does this mean relative to what we've done in the past?
13:19What are we going to be pushing for into the future?
13:22We think that the journey that we've been on and all of our teams have been on with us
13:26is so much more than just one number, but we also hope that that number just keeps being
13:31exceeded and exceeded by the future crews.
13:34That's why we're here, to build a legacy for the future.
13:38You know, it's interesting because yesterday, I mean, this thing went off almost perfectly,
13:44right?
13:44It was on time.
13:45Was that surprising?
13:46Because, you know, you look back just in recent history and missions tend to be delayed,
13:51sometimes hours, sometimes days.
13:53This thing went pretty much according to what everybody was hoping it would do.
13:59Was that somewhat surprising when they said, we are a go for launch?
14:07You two.
14:08Yes.
14:10You know, it was surprising.
14:14I think we were, you know, we like to say that we're prepared without having an expectation.
14:19But, you know, in the back of your mind, you kind of hope you launch.
14:22And then when we got really close, it was like, wait, we're getting ready to go to space.
14:25And when those solids lit, you know, it was a ride where you're trying to be professional,
14:30but the kid inside of you wants to break out and just hoot and holler.
14:33But what I wanted to say about that was our exploration ground systems team, our launch
14:40control team, they have had some time to practice since February and March and really dial in
14:45their procedures and learn and grow.
14:47And so I just want to give them some credit.
14:49It was an example of how hard they've been working lately that we launched.
14:55And it was, even though we didn't get to really watch, but it felt beautiful.
15:00Yeah, they should give themselves a big round of applause because it really, I know it felt
15:04beautiful.
15:05It certainly looked beautiful.
15:06Very quickly, Victor Glover, while I have you on the microphone, we are broadcasting across
15:13the nation, but we're focused.
15:14We're based in Los Angeles, and I thought since you were from Southern California, maybe you'd
15:18like to give a shout out to your friends and family here.
15:25Oh, well, of course, my mom lives there, my grandparents, all the cousins, aunts and uncles,
15:32and just everybody in California.
15:34Thank you for all of the support and the love for all of these years.
15:38So many of my career milestones happened in that special place that will always be home,
15:44no matter where the government sends me.
15:46You're going with us.
15:49How has it been on board now for your first night?
15:52I know you haven't gotten much sleep.
15:53They keep waking you up.
15:54They kind of send out the songs they are doing.
15:57And I hear, Christina, that you are somehow sleeping upside down or face down.
16:03Maybe you can explain that to us.
16:09Sure.
16:10Yes, it has been a great couple of days just learning how to live in Orion.
16:15And I would love to give a quick shout out to our families before we keep going on with
16:21the questions, just because we haven't had a chance to say hi to them.
16:25And it's just so great to have had their support building up to the launch.
16:29And we miss you guys already.
16:31Living in Orion isn't quite the same as being at home with our families.
16:35But yes, some of the exciting things are the burns that we do.
16:39They kick off with such an acceleration that most things that you see Velcroed around that
16:44aren't actually fastened down all fall down to the floor of Orion.
16:49But speaking of floors and ceilings, it actually is just all by convention only.
16:54There is no difference between up and down.
16:56And so, yes, I've been sleeping with my feet there and my head down here.
17:00And it's very comfortable.
17:02I think I'll probably stay there the whole mission unless someone kicks me out.
17:06So we're finding out how to make this space capsule a home.
17:11Maybe we can hand it to Jerry Hanson here.
17:13And, Jamie, you can also say hello, give a shout out to your family.
17:16And I'm wondering while you do that, if you'd like to tell us if there have been any glitches,
17:21any problems.
17:22I know we heard there was some kind of an issue with the onboard toilet.
17:26But beyond that, are we good so far?
17:35Yeah, great to have a chance just to say thanks to my family and missing them.
17:41And for the support from Canadians back home, I really appreciate the opportunity to be here
17:47and do this.
17:47We did have another little surprise today.
17:51I mean, the vehicle is in great shape, and we feel like everything is going really smoothly.
17:55But on our way to the trans-lunar injection burn inside of 20 minutes, we did get a warning
18:00message that – well, an emergency message for cabin leak suspected, which grabs your attention
18:07because this is right when you're coming through some of the higher-density orbits, and you
18:12might run into something.
18:14And, you know, you go from 20 minutes to doing this burn where you're going to head to the
18:19moon to thinking about, are we going to cancel this burn, start getting in our spacesuits,
18:22and then trying to figure out how to get home in a day or less.
18:26And luckily, that was just a little anomaly.
18:30And Houston helped us out.
18:32They confirmed they were seeing good cabin pressure, as were we on board, and we did
18:37the burn.
18:37And now we're on our way to the moon, feeling good about integrity.
18:40She's a good ship.
18:42It's going to be fantastic.
18:43Reed Weissman, you are the commander of this mission.
18:45Maybe you'd like to give a shout-out to your family as well.
18:48And I'm wondering the responsibility.
18:50Does it weigh heavy on you?
18:52Do you feel like, you know, I'm just not going to go to sleep?
18:54I'm going to make sure that we do everything we need to do.
18:58What is it like to be the commander of something so historic and something that people have
19:03been waiting for for so long?
19:10Well, to answer that, I'm learning from my crewmates here.
19:13I'm flying in space with two of the most skilled astronauts that we have, most accomplished
19:17astronauts.
19:17And Jeremy, on his first day in orbit yesterday, was just getting the job done 100%.
19:22So my job here is pretty easy.
19:24Definitely sometimes you get a little bit nervous.
19:26There's a couple things that caught our attention so far, but it's going great.
19:30And my job is very easy.
19:31I am definitely getting pulled along by my crewmates.
19:34And then you gave me the opportunity.
19:35I'm taking it.
19:36Say hi to my family, my dad back in Maryland, and my brother probably heading home to Washington.
19:43And then everybody back in Houston, my daughters, my girlfriend, everybody's doing great back
19:47there.
19:47Thank you.
19:48I guess really, lastly, what we really need to know is, are you happy so far with the food?
19:53Are you happy so far with the wake-up songs and the music?
19:56Any kind of requests that we can make on your behalf while we get a chance to talk to Mission
20:03Control a little bit later?
20:04We get a chance to talk to Mission Control a little bit later.
20:08We just had our first meal together.
20:10That's how busy it's been.
20:11And this morning, our lead public affairs, Courtney Beasley, we heard her voice come on the radio
20:17first.
20:17And she introduced the songs and some amazing messages from the teams across this international
20:23program that have put this vehicle together.
20:25And we all agree we would wake up slow and get into the day easy and quiet.
20:30And this morning, we all got up cheering and rocking and getting everything ready to go.
20:34It was the perfect way to start our day.
20:36Yeah, well, you are making history, Reed Weissman, Christina Koch, Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover.
20:42Congratulations to all of you, America.
20:44The world is with you.
20:46We are watching every moment of this journey.
20:49And we will cheer you when you get back and along the way.
20:53Thank you for joining us.
20:55Best of luck to you and safe travels.
21:05Integrity.
21:06This.
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