Aaron C.
710 posts

Aaron C.
@aaroncspace
He/Him, I’m cis though. Spaceflight and Technology Enthusiast. (I follow accounts to stay updated, not because I necessarily agree with them.)

This is the shot you can’t get from the press site. This camera was sitting a few football fields from the SLS rocket at Pad 39B for days before launch, baking in the Florida sun, surviving rain, humidity, and whatever else the Cape threw at it. No photographer behind the viewfinder. Just a camera, a sound trigger, and a bet. The way pad remotes work: you set your camera up days in advance, dial in your composition, lock everything down, and walk away. You don’t touch it again until after the launch. The shutter fires on sound activation with a @MiopsTrigger smart+ trigger. With SLS, the four RS-25 engines ignite six seconds before the solid rocket boosters, so the camera is already firing before the vehicle even leaves the pad. You get home, pull the card, and find out if you nailed it or if a bird landed on your lens two days ago and left your a present and you got 400 photos of soemthing crappy. There’s no formula for protecting your gear this close. Some photographers build wooden boxes with doors that pop open. Some use plastic bags and tape. Some do plastic or metal barn door rigs on hinges. I tend to leave mine open just in plastic rain covers because boxes limit my composition and setup time, but that means your cameras are more exposed to the elements and whatever energy and debris comes off the pad. You’re basically gambling a camera body every time you set one. That’s what I love about this genre. There’s no playbook. You make it up as you go. Every time is an adventure. 📸 credit: me for @SuperclusterHQ - Artemis II pad remote | ~1,000 ft from Pad 39B | Kennedy Space Center








i'm gonna build a Moon Base and i'm gonna build a Nuclear Reactor and send it to Mars and and and i'm gonna DOUBLE my launch cadence oh oh and AND i wanna launch crew to the Moon every Six Months AAAAAND i wanna do it by the end of 2028






the wikipedia article for toothpaste has a whole section on striped toothpaste, because they Get Me


BREAKING: ARTEMIS III RE-PROFILED, NET 2027 Instead of landing on the moon, Artemis III will be a Low Earth Orbit mission. Orion will exercise alongside one or both landers, Apollo 9 style. Artemis IV will now be the first landing mission. @NASAAdmin says they are trying to have up to 2 landing attempts in 2028, with 10-month turnarounds of SLS, compared to 3-year turnarounds. 📷 @_MaxQ_/@NASASpaceflight




The Sea Dragon was the largest rocket ever conceived. Created in the 1960s by Aerojet engineer Robert Truax, Sea Dragon was an enormous ocean-launched rocket designed to haul up to 550 tons into low Earth orbit—far beyond the capacity of any rocket ever built. The plan relied on low-cost shipyard construction, sea launch by buoyancy, and a simple ignition system to dramatically cut launch costs. Although it was never constructed, Sea Dragon remains one of the most audacious concepts in spaceflight history. Developed under Aerojet, it stands as a powerful example of how visionary engineering ideas can push the boundaries of what humanity believes is possible.











