The Artemis Rocket Turn Everyone Questions
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Rockets don’t fly straight up, and that single moment has sparked endless debate. This episode breaks down what’s really happening during a launch, and why orbit only works if you stop thinking in “up.”
There’s a moment in every rocket launch that makes people stop.
The engines fire.
The rocket climbs.
And then… it turns.
Not a little. Not by accident. It commits to it.
For some people, that’s just how spaceflight works.
For others, that’s where the questions start.
In this episode of Divergent Files, we take that moment seriously and break it down from the ground up. Not with jargon, not with dismissal, but with the actual mechanics of how objects move in space. We walk through orbital motion, velocity, freefall, and why reaching space has less to do with going “high” and more to do with going fast enough sideways that you keep missing the Earth as you fall around it.
We also examine what’s happening during stage separation, why satellites don’t just hang above you, and why astronauts appear weightless even though gravity never really goes away.
Because the confusion isn’t coming from nowhere.
It’s coming from the fact that spaceflight works in a way your brain was never built to intuit.
Up feels right.
Straight feels right.
Standing still feels right.
But orbit doesn’t care what feels right.
It only cares about motion.
This is a grounded, truth-first breakdown of rocket launches, orbital mechanics, and the moment that turns a simple question into a completely different way of seeing space.
Divergent Files is a truth-first investigative podcast for people who are willing to slow down, look closer, and understand what they’re actually seeing.
