Submitted by EricFromOuterSpace t3_z6k7cl in space
Comments
quesarah t1_iy23wv6 wrote
Exactly. Otherwise I believe the record for "farthest human made object" is held by one of the Voyagers.
Nakedatnight t1_iy2ce89 wrote
With all things considered I’m sure we can all say this doesn’t count but still very fun to be back in the game. But 13 was a different beast and without its “success” our work in the vastness is of space would be very different.
MaroonBookPro t1_iy2clg5 wrote
“Farthest human made object with chairs in it”
Active-Device-8058 t1_iy2d5ih wrote
Tell me you didn't read the article without telling me you didn't read the article.
Edit: Downvote all you want. This is a record for furthest human-rated spacecraft. That's literally the first line in the link. Everyone talking about "HURR BUT Voyager is way further" is completely missing the point. Human-rated doesn't require a human on board. You don't have to like it, but it's true.
Edit 2: Go argue with Nasa if you don't like it. The record stands:
https://twitter.com/NASA/status/1595145300628635648
swftswft13 t1_iy2ecns wrote
Where is that space Tesla hanging out these days?
MaroonBookPro t1_iy2hm8l wrote
Ah true.
Ok then, farthest human-made object with chairs and a roof.
CPUforU t1_iy2kftx wrote
Antique_Ad_7565 t1_iy2kssi wrote
It's about to pass 200,000,000 miles away from earth.
Antique_Ad_7565 t1_iy2nurc wrote
So, 8 years ago, Reddit knew this. But one of the guys working the mission didn't know til like 2021ish? Why would this man not know this, but rest of the world does? I feel bad for Gerry. Going 50+ years not knowing the mission he became a hero in broke the record.
craftworkbench t1_iy2pitw wrote
> The uncrewed Orion flew past the record-setting distance achieved by the Apollo 13 command module "Odyssey" at 248,655 miles from Earth (216,075 nautical miles or 400,171 kilometers) at about 8:40 a.m. EST (1340 GMT) on Saturday (Nov. 26).
> The Apollo 13 spacecraft had previously set the record on April 14, 1970, at 7:21 p.m. EST (0021 GMT on April 15).
Wait. So did Orion fly 248k miles? Or did Odyssey? And in either case, how far did the other one go?
craftworkbench t1_iy2pmkv wrote
Agreed. It'll be more momentous to break the record with humans aboard but it's still a great accomplishment to prove that a spacecraft designed for human flight can and has gone that far.
No need to put down the accomplishment, especially since it's clearly qualified in the article.
Antique_Ad_7565 t1_iy2q4z7 wrote
Apollo 13/ Odyssey went 248,655 miles. Artemis I/ Orion has been projected to go a maximum of 270,000 miles. This article is abit jumbled.
BirdUp69 t1_iy2q6yq wrote
They’re talking about the record cost/science ratio.
MasterMagneticMirror t1_iy2qcza wrote
Nope. The Apollo 10 Lunar Module ascent stage would still beat Artemis since it was put in solar orbit. As said by ESA, Artemis 1 is the farthest human rated spacecraft designed to bring back its crew to the Earth. So chair, roof and thermal protection system.
MasterMagneticMirror t1_iy2qjhl wrote
Human-rated and designed to bring back the crew to Earth. The farthest human-rated spacecraft period was the Apollo 10 ascent stage put in solar orbit.
toodroot t1_iy2shi9 wrote
It isn't human-rated yet. This test has to be passed first.
This capsule lacks most of the life support system, btw.
Edit: It's surprising how many sub members appear to think you can human-rate a spacecraft without flying it! Remember the challenges Boeing is still having with getting Starliner human-rated?
Active-Device-8058 t1_iy2svyq wrote
Lol okay I'll go let Nasa know. Thanks for your input:
https://twitter.com/NASA/status/1595145300628635648
LIVE NOW: On Sat, Nov. 26, /NASA_Orion will break the record for farthest distance of a human-rated spacecraft, previously held by Apollo 13. Join our /TwitterSpaces to reflect on /NASAHistory and look to the future of #Artemis. Use #AskNASA or raise your hand to ask questions.
NASA_Orion t1_iy2sz29 wrote
Am I being mentioned?
[deleted] t1_iy2szu1 wrote
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liquidpig t1_iy2w4yr wrote
Ah the old one way trip. So many of my kerbals ended up like this.
wedontlikespaces t1_iy2ynje wrote
That rather suggests that there is the record for the farthest rated human spacecraft that just let it's crew died when the mission was completed.
[deleted] t1_iy31qdl wrote
Soviets probably. Or Chinese.
Fmatosqg t1_iy32agk wrote
Wait what sub am I in?
Fmatosqg t1_iy32qvs wrote
Exactly, happy to get something close to the moon. Couldn't care less about the exact distance or other meaningless records unrelated to new requirements.
[deleted] t1_iy35oda wrote
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i_live_in_sweden t1_iy38a7z wrote
It's unmanned, so the record to beat would be that of Voyager. They can't beat Apollo 13 record until there is people on board.
[deleted] t1_iy39l76 wrote
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bigloser42 t1_iy3gniw wrote
It’s either Voyager or the manhole cover from operation plumbob. The low end estimate for its speed is 66 km/sec(41miles/sec). If it survived exiting the atmosphere, which it probably didn’t, it would have a pretty good lead on Voyager.
FinAroundFinout t1_iy3inix wrote
Humans will never leave this solar system. We are trapped here.
Our lifespans are the issue on generational ships. Oh well!
MaroonBookPro t1_iy3lu3g wrote
Pretty sure the Lunar Modules didn’t have chairs oddly enough.
Burgoonius t1_iy41pya wrote
I don’t even think that is beatable without light speed travel to catch up to it
tophatnbowtie t1_iy4c1yi wrote
While it will definitely be more notable when actual astronauts are on board, the record to beat is still Apollo 13. The article makes it clear - we're talking about the furthest distance traveled by a spacecraft designed to carry astronauts. Voyager cannot carry astronauts. Comparing Orion to Voyager is apples to oranges.
No mission currently launched or planned will ever overtake Voyager 1.
wswordsmen t1_iy4c89r wrote
You could say for a man rated spacecraft, in which case good luck beating Snoopy.
imafraidofmuricans t1_iy4ug9r wrote
No you just have to go 1 m/s faster and wait 40 years
Aeromarine_eng t1_iy5662g wrote
New Horizons space probe will never catch up to either Voyage.
[deleted] t1_iy6d4np wrote
the_dingle_berry t1_iy6db2o wrote
It's NASA, and Artemis. This sub hates both for some reason
EphraimJenkins t1_iy1yu41 wrote
Doesn’t count until there are people on board.