world for long periods of time. when you go to mars, you have to be willing to stay. a lot of people don't realize earth and mars, we're on the same side of the sun every 26 months. you have to be willing to stay. we need a place to learn to live and work for long periods of time. moon is that destination. tomorrow is a really big day and a lot of things are going to be tested. we're going to learn a lot of things. we all have our fingers crossed. reentering the earth's atmosphere is not easy, especially the way they are doing it now, which has never been done before. >> what are we going to learn about this reentry? what are the things we can glean from it? >> so this is called a skip reentry, which is -- think of skipping a rock. so the orion crew capsule will come back at 20,000 miles per hour. it's going to reenter the atmosphere, heat up to about half the temperature of the sun.
from liberty mutual!!! what does it do, bud? it customizes our home insurance so we only pay for what we need! and what did you get, mike? i got a bike. ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ nasa's spacecraft is scheduled to return to earth this sunday. the historic artemis 1 mission sent an uncrewed space capsule to orbit around the moon and has been sending back unbelievable closeups. joining me is the the nasa administrator. how do you feel about the reentry? we're amazed at the pictures. you must be over the moon. >> absolutely. and still will be. this is a test flight.
bout to do the damage they are doing right now. >> tragically, that's probably true. we will stay in touch and make sure that your brother is part of this continuing saga. because that's the only way that they will pay attention. thank you. >> thank you. ready for reentry. artemis is wrapping up. stay with us. this is "andrea mitchell reports" on msnbc. a mitchell reports" on msnbc. 'tis the season to switch to verizon. they'll give you the new iphone 14 pro. (scrooge) amazing phone! (vo) this holiday season verizon gives you the new iphone 14 pro. plus an apple gift, like apple watch se, ipad and beats fit pro. all on us. that's a value of up to $1900. (scrooge) wow! (vo) and there are unlimited plans for everyone starting at just $35 a line. it's our best deal of the year. get the network you deserve and the savings you want.
A community corrections program works to keep women jailed for nonviolent offenses from re-offending by helping them overcome the obstacles that landed them in jail in the first place.
cities, with local police departments, when we had people who were repeat offenders, we worked with them to bring the cases federally, the sentences were stiffer, there was no parole available and sent to a federal prison far from their home in new jersey, i would tell you that would reduce violent criminals in tears, they would turn on other violence criminals and turn there are people in, we turned camden. >> by reducing now 70% murder rate in camden, they could sent worst offenders federally to make sure they get stiff sentences. trey: that is the enforcement side, reality is most women and men incarcerated will be released from custody at some point. >> how we prepare the men and women for reentry also
the eight prayed together. >> back in the day they were not allowed to speak a language is, we were punished if we did, punished for just resting upon our gallia. being able to dance freely. >> for the senior who had a tough childhood being part of this i believe that sparked more of an interest for me to want to go back home and reentry thing that was. law >> now a schoolteacher six different native languages. -- just a dna language, also known as navajo. >> these are the change agents, and they are the ones that will make the difference. and we will see them continue to hear the language, the prayers, the songs. >> they hope the school becomes a model, as indigenous
high parabola, in other words, shooting almost straight up, going well into space, and coming back down but not going a long distance where it would be unclear where it would land and perhaps highly provocative. so in order to make the case that they could strike the united states, they would basically have to flatten out the parabola here and go a considerable distance. they also have not yet proven that they can shrink a nuclear weapon, and they've tested six, down to the size that they could fit into the nose cone of one of these missiles and that it could survive reentry into the atmosphere. so they're making the case that they can shoot a missile, but they haven't yet proven they could actually detonate one near an american city. >> to maybe it's just their hope that the inference should strike enough fear and concern and, you know, elicit the attention that it always seems to seek.
they are trying to perfect a long-range icbm capability. the reentry of the payload through the atmosphere back to earth, they still haven't demonstrated that. this is part of an operational effort to see that they can do these tests from stationary or mobile launchers. it's taking advantage of the fact that the united states is stretched with the war in ukraine as well as the situation with china and taiwan. so this is opportunistic. they feel like they have a lot of support from russia and china. russia and china will not support u.n. security council resolutions. they see the road ahead as really unobstructed in terms of continuing to press forward and make the u.s. security agenda that much more complex in the indo-pacific.
they are testing orion to see how it performs orbiting the moon. and as you suggested, the mannequins on board are going to be, essentially, giving real data to the engineers, to know exactly what the g forces will, be the radiation will be on future humans who might be on board. and they need to test the reentry shield on the bottom of that spacecraft to know that it will handle 5000 degrees on reentry and that they will safely land back in the pacific ocean. >> yeah, the naval ships will come and collect the space capsule. but we mentioned some of the mannequins on board. there are ten cubesats on board -- sls right now -- they are going to be deployed. we know one of them is going to be testing the effective radiation use cells. another is going to look for water and ice around the moon, close to them, about 62 miles away. another is going to actually unfurl its own solar panels, travel, propel itself towards a