How to Use Data From NASA’s AROW Tweets
Follow NASA’s Orion spacecraft on its first mission around the Moon with the Artemis Real-time Orbit Website (AROW). AROW visualizes data collected by sensors on Orion and provides periodic real-time data during NASA’s Artemis I mission. AROW is available on NASA’s website and on the @NASA_Orion Twitter account.
AROW will periodically tweet a set of Orion’s state vectors — data that describes precisely where Orion is located in space and how it moves — from Orion’s official twitter account once Orion is flying on its own.
You can use the information shared in AROW Twitter updates, explained below, to create a physics model, animation, visualization, tracking app, or anything imaginable. Here are some ideas for getting started:
Use the fundamental statistics to track or graph Orion’s distance from Earth or the Moon; its total distance traveled, closest lunar approach, farthest distance from Earth, etc.
Use the applied statistics to track or graph Orion’s acceleration due to gravity at a given time, using the position of Earth and Moon or comparing Orion's trajectory to the Apollo missions.
Create an animation or visualization of the mission to scale — maybe a time-lapsed view from inside the crew module looking out the window.
Based on data, recreate the mission in a space flight simulation video game platform with realistic orbits and maneuvers.
The data shared in AROW tweets are Orion’s state vectors, defined within the Earth-centered inertial coordinate frame J2000.
The P (position) coordinates provided represent Orion’s location on three planes:
Position (miles):
x=-237851, y=8725, z=23584
The x–y plane matches the equatorial plane of Earth.
The x-axis is permanently fixed in a direction relative to the celestial sphere, which does not rotate as Earth does.
The z-axis lies at a 90° angle to the equatorial plane and extends through the North Pole.
The y-axis is found by rotating the x-axis by 90° east around the z-axis.
To find a value for Orion’s distance from Earth, the Pythagorean theorem () can be used.
The three V (velocity) vectors represent Orion’s rate of change, corresponding with the position coordinates above:
Velocity (miles/hour):
x=1000, y=1251, z=300
As with position, the Pythagorean theorem can be used to find a value for Orion’s speed.
Also provided are O (orientation) vectors that describe the way Orion is pointing:
Orientation:
x=360.0°, y=0.0°, z=177.2°
Orion’s orientation is represented as three rotations measured in degrees around each of the axes laid out above.
Follow @NASA_Orion on Twitter for AROW mission updates during Artemis I, the first integrated test of the Orion spacecraft, Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the ground systems at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Through Artemis missions, NASA will land the first woman and the first person of color on the surface of the Moon, paving the way for a long-term lunar presence and serving as a steppingstone on the way to Mars.
Find more information about state vectors at:
https://www.nasa.gov/pdf/466741main_AP_ST_Calc_ShuttleGNC.pdf
Track Orion during Artemis I at:
https://www.nasa.gov/specials/trackartemis/












