Technicians at Before NASA’s Orion spacecraft for the Artemis II mission can be outfitted with its solar array wings, teams at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center must first verify that the arrays extend and close properly. On March 17, 2023, technicians inside the Florida spaceport’s Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building unfurled one of the wings to confirm all mechanisms operate as expected.
Orion will have four total solar wings, drawing in 11 kilowatts of power from the Sun to provide the spacecraft with propulsion, thermal control, and electrical power. The solar arrays will be installed on Orion’s service module – built by Airbus and provided by ESA (
Artemis II will launch on the agency’s Space Launch System rocket, prove Orion’s life support systems, and validate the capabilities and techniques needed for humans to live and work in deep space.
View a time-lapse of teams extending the solar array wing here:
The Orion spacecraft, developed by NASA, is designed to transport humans to unprecedented distances in space. As an exploration vessel, Orion’s purpose is to convey astronauts into space, offer an emergency escape option, maintain crew well-being during their journey, and ensure secure re-entry at high velocities from deep space. The spacecraft will be launched aboard NASA’s cutting-edge heavy-lift rocket, known as the Space Launch System.