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00:05Gracias.
00:35Gracias.
01:05Gracias.
01:35Gracias.
02:05Gracias.
02:35Gracias.
03:05Gracias.
03:35Gracias.
04:05Gracias.
04:35Gracias.
05:05Gracias.
05:35Gracias.
06:05Gracias.
06:35Gracias.
07:05Gracias.
07:35Gracias.
08:05Gracias.
08:35Gracias.
09:05Gracias.
09:35Gracias.
10:00I'm a religious person, but there was just no other avenue for me to explain anything or
10:05to experience anything, so I asked for the chaplain on the Navy ship to just come visit us for
10:09a minute.
10:09And when that man walked in, I'd never met him before in my life, but I saw the cross
10:13on his collar, and I just broke down in tears.
10:17It's very hard to fully grasp what we just went through.
10:21And in these short—you just said it's been a week since we've been back, but it's been
10:24a week of medical testing, physical testing, doctors, science objectives.
10:28Like, we have not had that decompression.
10:30We have not had that reflection time.
10:32So I'm basing this on what we saw.
10:34And when the sun eclipsed behind the moon, I think all four of us—I turned to Victor,
10:40and I said, I don't think humanity has evolved to the point of being able to comprehend what
10:44we're looking at right now, because it was otherworldly and it was amazing.
10:48The only thing I would add is that beautiful—first of all, thank you for sharing that.
10:52That was a really special moment.
10:53When I was in the bed right across when the chaplain came in, and the only thing I would
10:59add is I am a religious person, but everything else is the same.
11:05It was—there is something in there, and as we start the process, I'll have to tell you
11:09next week.
11:10But I haven't had a chance to really unpack it all yet.
11:15All right.
11:15We'll take one more here in the room and then head over to our phone bridge.
11:21Maybe not as deep, but connected.
11:23I'm Keith Garvin with KPRC2 here in Houston.
11:25Thank you so much for taking us on your journey, and so glad that you're home.
11:29You know, with the technology that we have today and what we can do with videos and pictures
11:34and social media, it can still be very hard for one to convey exactly what they're seeing
11:40to everyone else.
11:42What is the most remarkable or one of the most remarkable experiences that you all had that
11:47just couldn't be fully, properly conveyed through pictures and video, and that's for
11:52any of you?
11:55I can start.
11:56I was going to answer Kristen's question a little bit, too, and I think these tie together.
12:00I've been trying to find words for it.
12:02I don't really have it yet, but we just saw so many amazing things.
12:06And people ask, what's the most amazing one?
12:08And it's—yeah, you can't pick one.
12:10There's just so many amazing experiences we had.
12:12But overall, where I keep coming back to is what kept grabbing my attention when the lighting
12:18was right and we were looking out the window is that I kept seeing this, like, depth to,
12:23I guess, the galaxy, you know, for what we were visually observing out there, this depth
12:28to the galaxy that I just had never experienced before.
12:31And it's not that I could tell which stars were really closer and further because it has
12:34to do with how bright they are, but because of how bright they are and their differences,
12:37they look like you can tell where they are in 3D.
12:41And that was mind-blowing for me.
12:43And then you see the same thing with the moon and the earth.
12:45You're viewing them from this new perspective, but this perspective with, like, three-dimensional
12:50depth.
12:51And I've heard Christina talk about this a lot.
12:54We're all kind of struck by these things that make us feel small.
12:57And the sense I had was this sense of fragility and feeling small, infinitesimally small.
13:04But yet, this very powerful feeling as a human being, like, as a group.
13:11And that is what, to me, is what I would try to share.
13:14I saw it in all these sites over and over again.
13:17I kept seeing that same thing and that same feeling.
13:20Small and powerless, but yet powerful together.
13:24Beautiful.
13:26Okay, we'll head over to our phone bridge.
13:27Our next question is from Nell Greenfield with NPR.
13:32Hey.
13:33Welcome back, everybody.
13:35Tell me about your sleep.
13:37Have you been having any dreams of the moon?
13:39And if so, what have the dreams been like?
13:45I can take this one.
13:47I've got a couple things I can say on that.
13:50One, been sleeping great since we got back.
13:52We are tired.
13:53So I think our bodies were ready to accept any time zone of sleep that we offered it.
13:59And what I've noticed, which is completely different from my first flight, and surprisingly
14:03so since my first flight was so long, is every time I've been waking up or in the first few
14:10days, I thought I was floating.
14:12100%.
14:13I truly thought I was floating and I had to convince myself I wasn't.
14:18100%.
14:18And even after 328 days in space on my previous mission, I never did the thing where you think
14:24something will float in front of you.
14:26I've done that on this return for some reason.
14:29I put a shirt in the air and it went .
14:33It actually surprised me.
14:35And so that's been the real thing, which I've welcomed because space sleep is the best sleep
14:41ever.
14:42It's so peaceful.
14:43It's so comfortable.
14:45And to have a little bit of that after our mission was over so quickly has been really
14:50special.
14:52Our next question.
14:53I'll just tell a little funny thing because I think you'll get a kick out of it.
14:55I sleep a lot better now because I don't have Reed underneath me kicking me.
14:58Oh, come on!
15:01We should talk about our first night of sleep on the ship where we were about eight feet
15:06apart in the beds in the med bay and it felt way too far.
15:11That was not okay.
15:13I heard Christina say, hey, can we open up these curtains and pull all the beds together
15:16because you guys are way too far away.
15:17Way too far away.
15:19Okay, our next question is from Lauren Grush with Bloomberg.
15:25Hi, so good to talk to all of you and congratulations on a successful mission.
15:30Obviously, from our perspective, it's relatively smooth flight.
15:34But there were various moments where sensor readings would indicate an issue.
15:39There's also an issue with extra leaking from the valves on the helium pressure system.
15:43That was brought up a few times.
15:45I'm wondering if there were any moments throughout the mission where you felt concerned from a safety standpoint
15:50or did you feel like it was fairly smooth from your perspective?
15:56I might be taking that.
15:59Well, I might be a bit more dramatic than some of my crewmates,
16:03so usually they do a good job of keeping the boy with a lot of hyperbole grounded.
16:06But when you look down at your display and you see 212,000 miles and the miles are increasing,
16:12I mean, your awareness is heightened the whole time.
16:15I feel like it was, I was looking at all four of us.
16:19I was looking at myself reflecting as well every day.
16:22And I was just looking for signs of agitation or signs of stress or signs of anxiety or tension.
16:28In fact, I think one day we were in the med kit and we found some medication for that purpose.
16:32And we were like, wow, I just can't even imagine taking that.
16:34Like, we were just, we were really good. We were really, really good and really supportive of each other.
16:38But you always know in the back of your head that something could go wrong.
16:41And I think that just builds a little bit of anxiety.
16:44And you're right, we did have, we had some pressure leaking through our PCA assembly,
16:49which I'm sure we'll talk more about in post flight.
16:52We had some vent line issues on the toilet that were a little bit problematic for us on the primary
16:56vent line.
16:58And then we had a few cautions and warnings that came up from time to time.
17:02And those always, they always get your attention.
17:05We had a smoke detector go off on the next to last day.
17:08I mean, you want to get somebody's attention really quick?
17:11Make the fire alarm go off in your spacecraft when you're still about 80,000 miles from home.
17:16And that starts off an automated sequence of shutting down the ventilation and the power system.
17:20And that was, it was tense.
17:22It wasn't scary, but it was tense for a few minutes until we got things reconfigured.
17:26But the thing that we, we drilled into our heads before we launched is no fast hands.
17:32Let's, let's evaluate this machine.
17:34Let's see what the machine is telling us.
17:35Let's see what Houston is telling us.
17:37And then let's come to an integrated decision.
17:39But nothing had to happen quick.
17:41And this, this machine, I was talking to our program manager last night on the phone for just a minute.
17:46How are you?
17:47And I, like, there are always things we need to improve.
17:49Always.
17:50There are ways we need to do better living in space.
17:52There's a way this machine needs to be improved.
17:54But I, my own personal opinion, they could put the Artemis 3 Orion on the space launch system tomorrow and
18:01launch it.
18:01And the crew would be in great shape.
18:03So this vehicle really handled very well.
18:08All right.
18:08Next up, we are going to head over to the Canadian Space Agency for two questions.
18:14Yeah.
18:15Hi, Sarah Levitt from CBC News.
18:17Question for Jeremy.
18:19I wanted to ask about if you've had a chance to take out the garbage since your wife was griping
18:24about chores while you were away.
18:25But I have a more serious question.
18:28You spoke in your post-splashdown remarks about gratitude, joy, and love.
18:35And I know Reid had said that there hasn't been a lot that has sunk in yet.
18:39But I wondered if there were other emotions that have come to you since seeing Earth the way you did
18:47since seeing the moon being the four sets of eyes that have only ever seen the far side of the
18:52moon.
18:54I think what I've reflected on and Reid covered in his opening remarks is I found it really refreshing to
19:03find out how people have followed the mission and been creative with the mission.
19:07And there's lots of funny stuff online.
19:09And that really resonates with me a lot.
19:13And it just reinforces something I already knew.
19:17But, you know, humans are just great people in general.
19:19We don't always do great things.
19:20We're not always in our integrity.
19:22But our default is to be good and to be good to one another.
19:26And what we saw, once we've gotten back, the little bits, I haven't seen a lot yet, but I've seen
19:31a bit.
19:32And what I've seen has brought me more joy, but more hope for our future.
19:37And I just can't wait to see what we do with it next.
19:44Okay, we should have one more question from CSA.
19:48Hi, my name is Elise Allard. I'm from Radio-Canada, French CBC in Montreal.
19:53I have a question for Jeremy Henson, en français.
19:57J'aimerais savoir de quelle façon cette mission-là vous a changé, à la fois psychologiquement, mais aussi physiquement, après
20:07tous les tests que vous avez passés.
20:08Est-ce que vous avez eu des changements physiques et psychologiques?
20:15Physical and psychological changes from the mission.
20:18Pour moi, les changements physiques, ce n'était pas une grande chose, même en arriver dans l'espace et après
20:26ici sur la Terre.
20:28Et ça, c'est une bonne chose.
20:30J'étais capable de passer la mission et juste faire mon travail.
20:36Alors, c'est une bonne chose, ça.
20:40À l'autre côté, ça n'a pas vraiment changé le moyen, j'ai vu le monde, nos vies, mais
20:47ça a renforcé ça beaucoup.
20:50J'ai lancé avec le point de vue que la collaboration pour l'humanité, c'est la prochaine chose qu
20:57'on doit continuer à travailler dessus.
21:00Et en vous, la Terre, le point de vue de la Lune, ça a renforcé cet objectif pour l'humanité.
21:11Alors, j'ai un nouveau désir de travailler avec le monde pour créer ça pour nous.
21:20C'est vraiment important pour nous.
21:23Et aussi, je veux ajouter, maintenant, c'est évident pour moi qu'il faut que, il faut que nous prenons
21:34des grands risques pour arriver à des grands bénéfices.
21:39C'est vraiment évident pour moi, ça vaut la peine.
21:42Je veux dire, psychologiquement, vraiment, c'est ce que je disais, c'est que ça ne changeait pas mon monde,
21:49c'est que ça ne changeait pas mon monde, c'est que ça a renforcé.
21:51C'est juste une demande pour nous de collaborer sur ce plan.
21:55Et comme Christina a dit dans ses remarks, quand on a reçu, je veux vraiment être un crew et ça
21:59ressemblant avec nous.
22:00Et vous voyez, c'est ce que c'est ce que c'est ce que c'est.
22:04All right, nous allons prendre nos questions en la rue.
22:07Go ahead.
22:08Hi, my name is McKenna Erdner, and I'm with Fox26.
22:12My question would be, Victor, when I was watching you, as y'all were watching the video of y'all
22:19coming back down,
22:20and I heard you say, I felt that, or I saw you say that.
22:25What were you feeling when you come from deeper in space than we've ever been to then you can see
22:30the ocean again?
22:31What did you feel?
22:32What was your body telling you?
22:33Thank you, great question, and I'll keep my face quiet more next time.
22:39No, the moment, well, first of all, all of the things.
22:43That was a very intense 13 minutes and 36 seconds.
22:49That moment was when the drogues released, and then the pilot shoots and the mains came out.
22:59In Dragon, I've experienced a similar entry, and in Dragon, the drogues shoots don't release the same way in the
23:09same sequencing.
23:11And so I don't remember feeling, you know, back to free fall from having drag or G on the vehicle.
23:18I think those actually are still connected to the vehicle as the main chutes come out.
23:24On that vehicle, I remember feeling the yo-yo, though, as the parachutes were breathing, I could feel that 30,
23:2920 feet moving up and down.
23:31But when the drogues cut away, we went back to free fall, and watching that on the video felt almost
23:37the same way it felt in the video, or in the vehicle.
23:40I would tell you, I've never been base jumping, I've never been skydiving, but if you dove off a skyscraper
23:47backwards, that's what it felt like for five seconds.
23:50And then the mains, the pilots and the mains came out, and it was glory.
23:56Okay, we'll take our next question right here. Go ahead.
23:59Hey guys, I saw Christina posted you brought some Super Bowl confetti from the Eagles up there with you.
24:05I'm just curious if anybody else brought anything sports-related or something that you absolutely had to take up with
24:10you.
24:10Yeah.
24:14From a general sense, we all do get a very small allocation, mass allocation, and on this vehicle, it's very
24:22small.
24:23So we were just trying to think of things we could take.
24:25Like, I took a couple notes from friends and things that I had written down, some great quotes.
24:32And then I just, on my way out of my house, I just grabbed this bracelet, which my daughter had
24:36made for me a couple years ago.
24:38I was just like, I need something that I can just wear and take.
24:41And oddly enough, like that was the, it was the coolest thing for me to just be grounded every night
24:47when I would get my sleeping bag.
24:48And I would see this thing, and it's just like, it's that connection to home, to family, and to my
24:55daughters.
24:56And that was an accident, and it was a hugely successful thing for me.
25:00It really helped me stay grounded on that mission.
25:02So those things can come out of nowhere.
25:04Things that were so important to you when you launch can be less important in space.
25:08And things that were just an afterthought in space can become the absolute most important thing that you possibly, that
25:13you could possibly take.
25:14So I think overall, we did a pretty good job with that.
25:17And I've said it before, but just listening to them communicate with their families on those tiny little moments that
25:23we got to communicate with our families,
25:24we each got two chances to call.
25:26And for me, that's one of the most lasting impacts of this mission was listening to your friend and crewmate
25:32go into this other world with this headset on for 15 minutes and giggle and laugh.
25:37And every one of us cried.
25:38I mean, nobody didn't get through those things without crying.
25:41And then you would take those headphones off at the end, and it was like coming back into a different
25:44universe when you would come out of that family conference.
25:46And it just reminded you how important that is right there.
25:50Okay, we'll take one more here in the room and then head to our phone bridge.
25:53Go ahead.
25:54Hi, guys.
25:55Welcome back.
25:56Glad to hear that you've been sleeping well.
25:58This is Jishnu Nair with the Houston Business Journal.
26:01And this question is for all of you coming actually from a group of our younger readers.
26:06One thing I noticed during the 10 days that you guys were up in space is that we got so
26:11many emails, DMs, notes, whatever from younger folks expressing how cool it was and how they or their little brothers
26:20or their sons or daughters could, you know, get started.
26:24And we heard from leadership on Friday as you guys were, you know, reentering.
26:28We heard from leadership that NASA wants to be doing these missions more often.
26:33They want to be doing them faster and they want to be getting humans to the moon and beyond, hopefully.
26:38And so from, you know, some of the first people to actually have done it in quite a while, what's
26:44one piece of advice maybe that maybe each of you could give to these younger folks who are looking skywards
26:50now?
26:52You want to just go right down the line?
26:54I would say the big thing for me, and we saw it in this mission, is I think we're starting
27:00to lose scope as a society that you do have to go do things.
27:05Like you have to go do really hard, really challenging things, and you have to go move the needle.
27:10And that actually means, like, bending metal and fueling rockets or that means inventing a new way to do surgery.
27:15But we have got to get our hands out there and engaged.
27:18Our hands and our minds have got to be engaged.
27:22I think, you know, there's a professional path that folks are going to take to get into whatever profession and
27:28then, you know, that's kind of a springboard to get this job.
27:31This is no one's first job.
27:33It's not an entry level thing.
27:35But I would encourage them to start now before they even are on that journey to really get comfortable asking
27:41questions and then listening to their peers but also to their mentors.
27:47I think that has been a game changer for all of us.
27:50There's so much to know in this business, and none of us knows it all.
27:53Yes, it is my call sign, but I do not know everything.
27:56And we have to rely on the wisdom of the village so much that it needs to be a part
28:02of – it needs to be unconscious.
28:03You need to be unconsciously competent at asking a question or when people are just having a conversation that impacts
28:10something you need to know to just savor it, take it in, and make it a part of what you
28:16believe.
28:16The three things I've always encouraged young people to do I think still apply to be gritty or resilient, to
28:23be a lifelong learner, and to be a good teammate.
28:26So good.
28:28I love everything I've heard.
28:30The three things that I usually say and I don't think they've changed are find your fulfillment.
28:36I used to say find your passion, but for me it's changed to find what you can do the slowest
28:41for the longest and still absolutely love it and go in that direction.
28:46Do what scares you.
28:48The path of least resistance isn't usually the path that will give the most back to the world and give
28:53you the most sense of courage and confidence.
28:57And finally, support those around you.
28:59The benefits that compound when you support those around you and they support you back are just immeasurable.
29:08Maybe that one I'll emphasize is just follow the example that people saw here.
29:14Don't do it alone and share what you're trying to accomplish with others because you need the support of others
29:21to do big things.
29:22And so share your goals, be brave enough to share them, and then you'll be surprised how people surround you
29:28and lift you up to accomplish them.
29:31All right, we'll head over to our phone bridge. Our next question is from Andrea with the Houston Chronicle.
29:38Hi, I'd like to ask about mental health. You know, it was a very busy mission. How are you able
29:43to take care of yourself?
29:44You know, get some rest and some me time when you guys are sharing just that small area throughout the
29:49mission. Thanks.
29:53There wasn't much me time. There wasn't. You know, we have...
30:31Let's see.
30:55Gracias.
31:25Gracias.
31:55Gracias.
32:25Gracias.
32:55Gracias.
33:25Gracias.
33:55Gracias.
34:25Gracias.
34:55Gracias.
35:25Gracias.
35:55Gracias.
36:25Gracias.
36:55Gracias.
37:25Gracias.
37:55Gracias.
38:25Gracias.
38:55Gracias.
39:25Gracias.
39:59Gracias.
40:03Gracias.
40:04Gracias.
40:04Like, listen to our viewers as handling rating, handling qualities ratings, but the most
40:07important thing in handling qualities are the pilot comments.
40:11And so you got comments from an entire crew.
40:13It flew better than the Sim in all areas.
40:15I think that's probably the easiest way to say it, and it was just the integration of
40:19the full thing.
40:20The crew being there, seeing the same actual, you know, we have windows in the simulator,
40:25but there are screens, individual computer screens, so we see the same thing because
40:29it's trying to simulate parallax.
40:30But it means we're looking at, actually, different images, and so we're trying to call out measurements
40:34en algo que no es la misma cosa.
40:36Esta cámara estaba mostrando el mismo.
40:39Y Cristina tomó un video
40:40y fotos de nuestra
40:41upper stage, y no lo veía
40:44por unos días después.
40:46Y me hacía que me iba.
40:47Era que era el mundo todo el tiempo.
40:50La training funcionó.
40:52La team que vino con esa plan
40:53fue fantástico.
40:55Y yo le hechos
40:56de los ratings.
40:57No he filled out
40:58la survey.
40:59Pero es como un sueño.
41:00Pero es como un sueño.
41:02Y me alegra que todos
41:05¡Gracias!
41:37¡Gracias!
42:03¡Gracias!
42:34We all look to each other like, well, I guess we separated.
42:38Or it exploded.
42:42I think Jeremy Tardy's like, I think we just got ejected off of that thing.
42:46It was the biggest force we felt on the whole mission.
42:49Those are some legitimate spring pushers.
42:51Thanks.
42:54It's in work.
42:54The patch is in work.
42:56The number that we saw on the displays, and, you know,
42:59So I was very in tune with what Orion thinks it's going to do.
43:02It was 38.8, 38.89, it was the Mach.
43:07And so, well, patches didn't work, but it depends on how you measure that number.
43:11It's actually challenging to measure from space.
43:13So there will be a new one coming out when we figure it out.
43:18We'll take our next question from Eric.
43:20Go ahead.
43:21Eric Berger, Ars Technica.
43:22Congratulations on a great mission.
43:24It was really fun to follow.
43:26Question for when you were flying by the moon.
43:28Now, a couple weeks before you guys launched, NASA had this ignition event in D.C.
43:33where they talked about the moon base.
43:35And I'm just wondering, knowing how difficult it was for you for this mission,
43:40all it entailed, the training, the launch, and getting out there to the moon,
43:44this was a pretty rigorous endeavor.
43:46How realistic are you feeling about, like, humans actually going to the moon,
43:50going down to the surface, putting down roots there, staying,
43:53and actually establishing some kind of semi-permanent settlement, you know,
43:58doing something quite different than we did in the 1960s with Apollo?
44:02Yeah.
44:03Well, I think we probably haven't talked about this exactly as a crew.
44:08We talked about how that ignition event made us feel prior to the mission,
44:12which was that it pumped us up.
44:14We were very much lifted up by the notion that we would get to contribute to astronauts
44:19doing this all over again much sooner than we thought,
44:21that we were going to be focused on the moon base, on surface operations.
44:25And I would say, if nothing else, we are feeling even more excited
44:30and just ready to take that on as an agency.
44:35A couple things contribute to that.
44:36One is how well the team and the spacecraft took care of us.
44:40We had things on this mission that you might think weren't really necessary
44:43in just a quick shot to the moon, but we made it happen.
44:46We exercised along the way, is a great example.
44:50When we got back to Earth, we all, within one or two days,
44:53were in surface spacewalk suits doing surface geology tasks
44:59and doing them well and able to complete an entire battery
45:03of very challenging surface tasks in a spacewalking spacesuit for surface missions.
45:10There's just so many examples where we've shown that we can,
45:14all of the analysis that we do prior to missions, all of the talking that we do,
45:18all of the what ifs, all of the just coming up with every possible operational workaround
45:23for anything you might encounter, we can do that and we do.
45:27So we figure out all these things that could go wrong,
45:31all the extra resources it's going to take to do these things
45:34that sound completely outlandish and impossible right now,
45:38but the truth is accomplishing the near impossible is exactly what we do
45:42and what we just showed that we can do.
45:46I don't really want to add anything to that because that was so perfect.
45:49I'm going to say one last little thing,
45:51which is I did have a little weird technical epiphany, Eric, while we were out there,
45:55which was we just went like 250,000 miles away,
45:58and I'm telling you right now, if we had a first flight lander on board that thing,
46:02I know at least three of my crewmates would have been in it trying to land on the moon.
46:04Like, the jump, when you think about Apollo, Apollo 8 went around the moon,
46:089 stayed in Leo, 10 almost landed on the moon,
46:13and I've talked to a few of those gentlemen in the past,
46:15and they said if they had enough fuel, they would have done it.
46:18It is, it's not, oh, I'm going to eat these words,
46:21it's not the leap I thought it was.
46:23Once we're around the moon, we're in the vacuum of space,
46:26we've got a six-stall vehicle that's handling great,
46:29if you had given us the keys to the lander,
46:31we would have taken it down and landed on the moon.
46:32It is not the leap I thought it was.
46:34It's going to be extremely technically challenging,
46:36but this team needs to show up every day knowing it is absolutely doable,
46:39and it's doable soon.
46:41This mission taught me that the unknown is way scarier than the known.
46:47Every single time we accomplished a mission test objective,
46:50we all looked at each other and were like, that actually went pretty well.
46:54That was actually not necessarily easy because it took a ton of work,
46:59but it was easy to accomplish as a team because we had put in the work.
47:03We know how to put in the work to make it accomplishable when the time comes.
47:07Awesome.
47:07I think, Eric, I'd like to add something that I think you're pulling at too,
47:10is I agree with everything that was said.
47:13We have to be willing to accept a little more risk
47:16than we were willing to accept in the past
47:17and to just trust that we will figure it out in real time.
47:20We're not going to be able to pound everything flat before we go.
47:23We're going to have to trust each other
47:25and cruise and mission control to work through real problems.
47:30And it was very evident to us out there.
47:32Like, this went really smoothly, super smoothly.
47:34I'm not surprised.
47:35Extraordinary team.
47:35A lot of work was done in advance.
47:37But it was also very clear to us that it could get pretty bumpy.
47:40Yeah.
47:40And whoever is going out there to do those things has got to understand
47:43it could get real bumpy real fast, and it has to be ready to take that on.
47:48Thank you.
47:48Hey, since everybody spoke, I'm going to just say one thing.
47:50Eric, it was awesome to hear you start this off by saying something was fun.
47:54Thanks, buddy.
47:57Okay.
47:58We'll take one more question here in the room and then head to our phone.
48:01That's my question.
48:01Mark, go ahead.
48:02That's great.
48:03Mark Corot with Aviation Week in Space Technology.
48:06Awesome.
48:07How much longer will you be in post-mission Johnson Care,
48:11and have you found that to be a valuable part of the mission?
48:16No.
48:18That's a good question.
48:20So, you know, the program we use for flying to and from the International Space Station
48:24is kind of the cut and paste what we started with,
48:28and then we whittled it away and tried to make it appropriate for this mission duration.
48:32So there is a dedicated two-week period of medical checks, science collection,
48:37and strength and conditioning, rehabilitation, readaptation.
48:41And then, you know, there's out to four months where we're going to do the public affairs
48:47and appearance events.
48:50There's about a 45-day cutover where we're actually the person we work for will change.
48:56So there actually, there's a sort of a gradual redeployment
49:00or a gradual move out of the post-flight.
49:03But it started off with the same basic plan that we use for ISS,
49:08knowing that this is a short mission,
49:09so we may not need reconditioning for 30 or 45 days like I did post-ISS.
49:15And we've just been trying to tailor it.
49:17But one reason, though, that it's really important,
49:19I mean, I felt like a million bucks on Friday.
49:22So today I'm up to a million and six bucks.
49:25But it's important for us to run these processes out
49:29because we are still making changes and learning ways
49:32that we're going to support the 30- and 45-day missions of Artemis 345.
49:36And so it's really important for us to keep practicing,
49:38keeping our heads in the game.
49:39Yeah.
49:40All right, we will head back to our phone bridge.
49:43Josh with space.com.
49:44Let's try this again.
49:47Hi, Josh, interspace.com.
49:48Hope you can hear me this time.
49:49Can y'all hear me this time?
49:52Hello?
49:53Yes, we have you loud and clear.
49:55Oh, excellent.
49:56All right.
49:57So I'm curious, as you have each been looking for the words
50:01to relay this experience to your family and friends
50:04and colleagues since your return,
50:06you know, everyone has their own perspective
50:07of viewing the narration of their story.
50:10And I'm wondering, once Hollywood gets a hold of this story
50:14and makes the Artemis 2 movie that I'm sure will inevitably be made,
50:18what part of this mission needs to be told,
50:24you know, in the most crucial, specific way possible?
50:27What part of this mission tells the story
50:29that Hollywood needs to get right?
50:34I would just start by saying a movie wouldn't do it justice.
50:39It has to be a series.
50:40There's so much to talk about.
50:47Okay, we will take our next question from...
50:50Oh, wait, wait.
50:50We got to give...
50:51We got to honor that one a little.
50:52Just give us a second, Courtney.
50:55I guess the thing that might be hardest to convey,
51:00no matter what the platform,
51:02would be how much it meant to us
51:05to bring everyone along with us
51:07and how much it meant to us
51:09to hear that the mission had an impact.
51:13I cannot overstate how important that was to us.
51:18It was every bit as important
51:20as accomplishing the technical goals
51:23and being there for our NASA teammates
51:25was to make this the world's mission
51:27and for it to have a positive impact
51:30on as much of the world as possible.
51:35All right, our next question is from Marcia Dunn
51:38with the Associated Press.
51:41Oh, hi.
51:42Welcome back.
51:43Read for you, please.
51:44I was looking for a report card
51:46on the heat shield following reentry.
51:48What are you hearing on how it fared?
51:50Was there very much damage?
51:52Thanks.
51:53That's a great question.
51:54It's, you know, as, as, uh,
51:57for sure we need to see what NASA says on the data.
52:00We have got to,
52:00they are going to do to this heat shield
52:03what they did to Artemis I
52:04and we are going to fine-tooth comb every single,
52:06not even every molecule,
52:07probably every atom on this heat shield.
52:09But we, the four of us,
52:11when we got off the Navy ship,
52:12the USS John P. Murtha,
52:14we were getting ready to get on the helicopters
52:16and I think we all kind of agreed
52:17that we heard that integrity
52:19was in the well deck there
52:20and we did not want to,
52:21we did not feel right leaving that ship
52:23without doing two things.
52:24Number one, we wanted to see our spacecraft.
52:26We wanted to go look at that spacecraft.
52:28And number two,
52:29there was a gentleman
52:29who led the Charlos investigation team
52:32after Artemis I,
52:33a single name, Luis,
52:34but he managed a great team
52:37and we heard he was on the ship
52:38and we just,
52:39I needed to hug that man.
52:40I needed to go see that man
52:42and thank him
52:43because the data that they pulled from Artemis I,
52:46I think Artemis I is probably
52:47the most studied heat shield
52:49in the history of space flight,
52:51for sure the history of human space flight,
52:52maybe the shuttle in its early days,
52:54I don't know.
52:54But they figured out
52:57what was wrong with that heat shield,
52:58they determined root cause of that heat shield
53:00and then they left it up to NASA to decide
53:03are we going to fly a different heat shield
53:04or are we going to change the trajectory
53:05and fly as is?
53:07And they gave us, NASA,
53:09the options to do what we thought was right
53:11and we modified our trajectory.
53:13We came in with what's called
53:15a horizontal target line
53:15somewhere around 1,700 miles.
53:17We originally got a 2,300
53:19and we were going to float
53:20through the atmosphere for a long time,
53:21but that was where the Artemis I heat shield
53:22was seeing problems.
53:23So we came in fast and we came in hot
53:25and I will tell you,
53:26looking out the window that whole way in,
53:28it was a smooth ride.
53:29It was a very smooth ride.
53:31I think Ike and I maybe saw
53:33two moments of a touch of char loss.
53:36Certainly when we went up to the vehicle,
53:37there was a little bit of char loss
53:39on what's called the shoulder,
53:40which is kind of where the heat shield
53:41meets the structure of the cone shape
53:44of the spacecraft.
53:46But the bottom,
53:47we leaned under and looked at the bottom of that thing
53:49and for four humans just looking at the heat shield,
53:51it looked wonderful to us.
53:53It looked great.
53:54And that ride in,
53:55that ride in was really amazing.
53:58All right, we'll take another question
53:59on the phone bridge
54:00from Anthony Leone with Spectrum News.
54:05Hello, welcome back.
54:07Thank you for taking time
54:08to answer our questions today.
54:11We touched on a little about the future missions.
54:14What piece of advice do you each have
54:17for the future Artemis crew
54:18who will land on the moon again?
54:20Thank you.
54:26I'm taking up a lot of CO2 today.
54:28I'll keep this short.
54:29You have got to invest in each other.
54:31That's the number one thing I would say.
54:35After that, I would tell them to,
54:37well, something that was shared with us
54:39from the crude flight test,
54:41the Boeing CFT crew,
54:43ask more questions.
54:44That's a great one.
54:46Yeah.
54:49I would say in addition to those,
54:53remember that you are part of a team.
54:56Something that we do well
54:58is we always thank our teams
54:59for what they've done.
55:00And something I always add to that
55:02is congratulations.
55:04Because to say thank you sometimes to me
55:07seems like there's an assumption there
55:10that we're the one that did it
55:11and everyone else supported.
55:13But that's not how I see it.
55:15I see it as we all are 100% teammates.
55:18If anything, we did the least.
55:20And congratulations.
55:22Say that every day to your teams,
55:24your teammates.
55:25You're probably the last one
55:26that got added to this team.
55:28That's a great answer.
55:30Yeah, that's a tough one to follow.
55:33I'd probably,
55:34if I had to give them some different advice,
55:36I'd give it back to the technical
55:38and just that really getting to know
55:40the parts of your spacecraft
55:43that you could end up, you know, alone.
55:46Just, we thought a lot,
55:48this crew,
55:49we spent a lot of time thinking about
55:50what if we don't have mission control
55:51and what are the critical things
55:53to keep us going long enough
55:54to get back in touch with mission control.
55:57And that's,
55:57I think that always needs to be
55:58an area of focus.
56:00Great.
56:02Okay, we have time
56:03for one more question in the room.
56:05If I could get a raise of hands.
56:08Erin.
56:11Hi, Erin Winnick-Anthony
56:12for CBS Mission Unstoppable.
56:14For Christina,
56:15you said advice for the crew as a whole,
56:17but for the astronaut that's selected
56:18for this to be the first woman
56:19to walk on the moon,
56:20do you have any specific lessons learned
56:22or advice to pass along to them?
56:24For me,
56:25I think the biggest word
56:27about all of the superlatives
56:29that you're going to encounter,
56:30all of the things
56:31that you're going to be asked to do,
56:33react to,
56:34be a part of,
56:35contribute to,
56:36is it's humbling.
56:38And if you remember
56:39that being part of a team
56:41is your main goal
56:43and the main thing
56:44that you put ahead
56:47of everything else,
56:49that when the world
56:50tries to make the accomplishment
56:52something different
56:53than what it really is,
56:55which is a team accomplishment,
56:56you will know
56:58and the things that you say
57:00will reflect
57:01how you really see it.
57:03And it's beautiful.
57:06All right.
57:06That is all the time
57:08we have for today.
57:09Thank you to the Artemis II crew
57:11for your time today
57:12and for such an inspiring mission.
57:14And thank you to our media
57:15for your continued interest
57:17in NASA's Artemis II mission.
57:19We'll see you next time.
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