The Artemis Real-time Orbit Website will enable space enthusiasts to follow NASA’s Orion spacecraft as it orbits the moon in real-time (AROW). On August 28, this will be accessible through the @NASA Orion Twitter account and the NASA website.

The Orion spacecraft’s first combined flight test with the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is anticipated to take 40,000 miles beyond the moon’s surface.
Viewers may monitor the spacecraft’s distance from the Earth, distance from the Moon, mission length, and more via the website. Throughout its mission, sensors will collect data and transmit it to the Mission Control Center at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.
“This is a very compelling approach to connect with the project and comprehend the scale of what NASA is attempting to do with Artemis I,” says Seth Lambert, an Orion programmer and the inventor of AROW.
Users will be able to follow the mission’s significant accomplishments as well as details about the moon, such as information on landing locations, on the website.
NASA will also put the first woman and the first person of color on the moon with the Artemis mission.