So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter wow what a career you have had! Congratulations on retirement.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Congrats..quite the span!
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Congratulations on your retirement and career. Time to enjoy yourself!
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter amazing time to be working for NASA! Hope you enjoy your retirement.

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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
thank you for your service.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Oh wow. Congratulations!
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter dude congrats on the retirement - and wild last day!
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Happy retirement!! I wholeheartedly recommend it.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter congrats on the retirement, and thank you for your service.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Congratulations from another retired civil servant. Thank you for your service!
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@Trilobyter Congratulations from another retired civil servant. Thank you for your service!
@Nonya_Bidniss thanks! & hope you are enjoying a well deserved retirement after your years of service. In my case all my work for NASA spaceflight was as a contractor employee, but my father was NASA civil service, he started there near the beginning of Apollo in the early 60’s. So between the two of us my family has had a combined 64 continuous years supporting NASA, Apollo->Space Shuttle->Orion
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter @lisamelton Congratulations and thank you
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter
Can I ask a dumb question.
What don't we know about the moon already? Why was this mission created?PS. Congrats on retirement. Please volunteer at schools to get kids excited about science.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter This is SO cool, congratulations!!
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@Trilobyter This is SO cool, congratulations!!
@8ofpentacles thanks!
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@Trilobyter
Can I ask a dumb question.
What don't we know about the moon already? Why was this mission created?PS. Congrats on retirement. Please volunteer at schools to get kids excited about science.
@greenhombre a valid question to ask, but of course my response is biased. My answer is we don’t even know what we don’t know about the moon. We’ve barely spent any time on or covered but the merest square meters of the surface, by humans or by robots. That’s the point of return & exploration, to advance scientific knowledge & discovery. And we have many ideas, but till we actually do it, we don’t know how to build & sustain outposts on other bodies in our solar system. Moon is where we begin.
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@greenhombre a valid question to ask, but of course my response is biased. My answer is we don’t even know what we don’t know about the moon. We’ve barely spent any time on or covered but the merest square meters of the surface, by humans or by robots. That’s the point of return & exploration, to advance scientific knowledge & discovery. And we have many ideas, but till we actually do it, we don’t know how to build & sustain outposts on other bodies in our solar system. Moon is where we begin.
@Trilobyter
What's the point of a flyby in 2026? Hopefully a badass 10K version of EarthRise will come out of it. -
@Trilobyter
What's the point of a flyby in 2026? Hopefully a badass 10K version of EarthRise will come out of it.@greenhombre This is a test flight of the Artemis system, including the first crewed flight of the Orion spacecraft that I worked on. With that there are many Orion systems being flown for the very first time, such as the internal environment control and life support systems, audio communications, manual control systems, etc. It is an ambitious test flight and an essential step toward proving the spacecraft and preparing for later lunar landing missions.
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@greenhombre This is a test flight of the Artemis system, including the first crewed flight of the Orion spacecraft that I worked on. With that there are many Orion systems being flown for the very first time, such as the internal environment control and life support systems, audio communications, manual control systems, etc. It is an ambitious test flight and an essential step toward proving the spacecraft and preparing for later lunar landing missions.
@greenhombre One other new system being tested on Orion during this mission is an optical communications system, a high bandwidth laser-based comm link between Orion and the earth that, if it works, may provide live (or playback) hi-def video of scenes like the moon & even possibly an “earth rise”.
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So as of yesterday I am retired, had a 37+ year career working in #NASA human spaceflight, Space Shuttle and then the #Orion spacecraft. I set my retirement date in the hope that the #Artemis 2 mission, Orion’s first crewed flight, would have completed by then but Feb launch was delayed and by “cosmic coincidence” Artemis 2 finally launched yesterday - my final day. Very proud of all my colleagues and all the hard work we’ve done to get to this point. Onward to the #moon - and beyond. Ad astra.
@Trilobyter Congratulations.