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Sanuga Kuruppu
Sanuga Kuruppu

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Artemis II Isn’t About the Launch — It’s About the Rehearsal

Most people think space missions are defined by liftoff.
Drawing of Mission Control Center

From an engineering perspective, Artemis II is defined by everything that doesn’t fly.

Before a single engine ignites, NASA runs Artemis II through months of rehearsals: stacking operations, integrated system tests, simulations, wet dress rehearsals, emergency evacuations, and full countdowns that intentionally stop seconds before ignition.

Why?

Because a crewed launch is not a single event — it’s a distributed system.

Each phase is a checkpoint:

  • Can Orion talk to ground systems?
  • Can the crew get out if something fails?
  • Can software take over when humans must step back?
  • Can the system recover from a pause at the worst possible moment?

At T-33 seconds, control of the countdown is handed to automated systems. Humans intentionally remove themselves from the loop because software reacts faster and more consistently than people can under pressure.

This is a pattern every engineer recognizes:

You don’t test in production.
You rehearse until failure becomes boring.

Artemis II is NASA applying that mindset at a planetary scale.

I built artemis2.live to document these details in one place — not as news, but as a living reference for how a modern human spaceflight mission actually works.

If you’re curious how large, safety-critical systems are prepared for the moment where nothing can go wrong, this mission is worth watching.

👉 https://artemis2.live

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