Artemis II: The Slow, Careful Move to the Moon Launch Pad
Key Vocabulary
Listening
Artemis II: The Slow, Careful Move to the Moon Launch Pad
NASA has rolled the Artemis II Space Launch System and the Orion crew capsule to Launch Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The integrated stack was carried from the Vehicle Assembly Building on Crawler-Transporter 2, a nearly four-mile route that was completed in about twelve hours. The crawler moved the stack at a maximum speed of 0.82 miles per hour while teams repositioned the crew access arm and checked ground systems. The 11-million-pound vehicle stands about 322 feet tall.
In the coming days, engineers will prepare for a wet dress rehearsal that is scheduled for the end of January and will test fueling and countdown procedures. Additional wet dress rehearsals may be required, and if work is needed the rocket could be rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Four crew members — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen — will fly a roughly ten-day mission that will circle the Moon before returning to Earth. The launch window opens as early as February 6, 2026, and managers will confirm a launch date after assessing readiness.
Quiz
Reading Practice
Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.
Discussion
Do you think careful testing is important for big projects like this? Why?
Have you ever worked on a task that needed many checks? What happened?
What do you think of the slow, careful way the rocket moved to the pad?
Would you like to watch a live stream of a space rollout? Why or why not?