Utahns celebrate their contribution to the Artemis II mission

Friends and family watch the Artemis II launch at the Utah State University Tremonton campus, Wednesday. The fuel boosters on the rocket were made in a facility just north of Ogden in Tremonton.

Friends and family watch the Artemis II launch at the Utah State University Tremonton campus, Wednesday. The fuel boosters on the rocket were made in a facility just north of Ogden in Tremonton. (Wesley Barton, KSL)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Utah played a crucial role in the Artemis II launch with boosters made in a facility north of Ogden.
  • Mike Wadsworth, grandson of astronaut Don Lind, celebrated the launch's success on Wednesday.
  • Northrop Grumman's Gage Swenson also emphasized Utah's vital contribution to the mission.

OGDEN — The Artemis II launch wouldn't have been possible without Utah; the massive fuel boosters that lifted the rocket to space came from a facility just north of Ogden.

Friends and family members came together to watch the launch at the Utah State University Tremonton campus, most with a story of how their family helped get these astronauts to space.

"We belong in space. We belong. Traveling. Seeing the stars," said Mike Wadsworth, a teacher at Bear River Middle School.

Wadsworth is the grandson of astronaut Don Lind, the first Utahn in space in 1985, who also did communications on the first mission to the moon with Neil Armstrong.

Astronaut Don Lind, the first Utahn in space in 1985. Lind participated in communications with Neil Armstrong in the original Apollo missions.
Astronaut Don Lind, the first Utahn in space in 1985. Lind participated in communications with Neil Armstrong in the original Apollo missions. (Photo: Mike Wadsworth)

"When he said, 'One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind,' he was talking to my grandpa," said Wadsworth.

Wadsworth teaches just a couple miles away from Northrop Grumman, the company behind the Artemis rocket boosters.

"Talk about space travel. 'My dad works here or my uncle works here.' It's really cool, like, yeah, that's right in our backyard."

A look at the Artemis II rocket. The rocket got some help from Utah-made rocket boosters at Northrop Grumman.
A look at the Artemis II rocket. The rocket got some help from Utah-made rocket boosters at Northrop Grumman. (Photo: Gage Swenson)

Gage Swenson works in quality control at Northrop Grumman and followed the boosters to Florida for most of last year to prepare for Artemis II. He said watching the rocket launch was surreal.

"This proved to the world that we are definitely still in the space race and, where it might take us three years to get a rocket done, it works every time," he said.

Swenson explained how valuable Utah's contribution is to a successful mission, "We are completely vital. The white boosters, the boosters that we make here, provide 75% of the boost. They get that rocket out of the atmosphere during the first two minutes."

Swenson is getting ready to move to Florida full-time for a new job with quality control at NASA.

"Today I just feel a sense of pride in the work that we do and like it matters," said Swenson.

After delivering the Orion capsule safely to space, the boosters fell into the sea. Swenson explained they will be fished out and brought right back here to Utah to be refurbished and refueled for the next mission.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Sarah Martin, KSLSarah Martin
Martin is a reporter for KSL. Originally from Southern California, she's lived in Utah for more than a decade and has several years of experience covering Utah news.

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