NASA has begun a critical two-day wet dress rehearsal for the Artemis II mission at Kennedy Space Center, simulating launch procedures without engine ignition. The test involves loading the Space Launch System rocket with over 700,000 gallons of propellant and could pave the way for a crewed launch as early as February 8. This marks preparation for the first human trip beyond low Earth orbit since 1972.
In the early hours of a cold February Sunday morning, a full moon illuminated NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket at Kennedy Space Center as teams initiated the wet dress rehearsal for Artemis II. This practice countdown replicates every launch day step except engine ignition, including the loading of more than 700,000 gallons of super-cold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellant. The 322-foot-tall SLS rolled out to the launch pad two weeks prior, and engineers are conducting final checks amid challenges from a recent deep freeze that delayed the test by two days. Adaptations include adding heaters to the Orion capsule and adjusting rocket purge systems.
If successful, the rehearsal could enable a launch attempt by February 8, within a tight window constrained by orbital mechanics and weather; otherwise, the mission must wait until later in the year, no later than February 11. Meanwhile, the Artemis II crew—Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen—is in quarantine at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston since late January to avoid health risks. The astronauts, who have trained together since 2023 in simulators, T-38 jets, and mission control tests, will monitor the rehearsal remotely before heading to Florida if cleared.
Artemis II will send the crew on a 10-day free-return trajectory around the Moon in the Orion capsule, named Integrity, passing about 6,400 miles beyond the lunar far side before splashing down in the Pacific Ocean. It is the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in 1972. Wiseman, on his second spaceflight, described the mission as shifting exploration from memory to lived experience: “In our lifetime, we’ve looked at the Moon knowing that people had been there. And now in the Artemis generation, kids will walk out and look at the Moon going, we are there.” Glover emphasized humanity's exploratory drive: “Pushing ourselves to explore is just core to who we are.” Koch added, “From the time humans started exploring, this was always in our future and in our fate. We were always going to the Moon.”
The mission advances NASA's goals for sustained lunar presence and eventual Mars exploration, representing a technical and generational milestone. Koch returns after setting a women's record for longest single spaceflight, while Hansen becomes the first Canadian on a lunar mission.