Artemis 2 astronauts approach historic Moon flyby

NASA's Artemis 2 four astronauts are approaching the Moon, with the mission's climax set for Monday's flyby of its far side, the first since Apollo 8 58 years ago. They may view regions never seen by human eyes, such as Mare Orientale. The crew will set a new record for distance from Earth.

On Sunday, astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen rest in the Orion spacecraft, traveling over 4,000 km/h. NASA plans to wake them at 11:50 local time, nearly 6:00 p.m. in Spain. Live images show Glover floating while drinking and Koch managing trash bags with Houston control.

On Monday, they will enter the Moon's sphere of influence after a nearly six-minute engine burn placing them on translunar orbit. They have covered half the distance, and the Moon will soon appear basketball-sized at arm's length. It is a 10-day round trip without landing, the first step toward a 2028 landing.

Unlike Apollo 8, which orbited at 120 km, Artemis 2 will fly by at 4,000 km, allowing views from pole to pole, including the Aitken basin and Shackleton crater at the south pole. They will observe Mare Orientale, an impact basin from 3.8 billion years ago with high concentric mountain rings invisible from Earth. Human eyes discern terrain details faster than photos, NASA highlights.

For about six hours of observations, they will use cameras and describe sights, supported by scientists at Johnson Space Center. Glover, the first Black man to go to the Moon, will photograph his crewmates' reactions, he told The New York Times. Koch, the first woman, will identify her feelings of awe and unity.

They will reach 406,772 km from Earth, exceeding Apollo 13's record by over 6,000 km. Communications will black out for 40 minutes behind the far side.

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NASA Artemis II Orion spacecraft halfway to Moon, crew visible inside viewing Earth and lunar target.
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Artemis II crew passes halfway mark en route to lunar flyby

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NASA's Artemis II astronauts have surpassed the halfway point to the Moon following Wednesday's translunar injection burn, continuing smooth progress on the historic 10-day mission—the first crewed trip beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17. The crew is on track for a lunar far-side flyby tomorrow and observations on April 6.

Fifty-eight years after Apollo 8's lunar orbit, Nasa is set to launch Artemis II, a crewed flyby that will take astronauts farther from Earth than ever before. The mission will test key technologies for future lunar landings and mark a step toward a permanent moon base. The crew, currently in quarantine, includes commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen.

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NASA's Artemis II mission lifted off successfully on April 1, 2026, from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, sending astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen aboard the Orion spacecraft for the first crewed Moon flyby since Apollo 17. Powered by the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the 10-day test flight will validate critical systems for future lunar landings and Mars missions, looping around the Moon's far side.

As the US Artemis 2 crew completes its historic 10-day lunar orbit mission—the first with humans since Apollo—China is scrutinizing every detail for technical lessons to support its own astronaut lunar landing by 2030.

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NASA has set March 6 as the earliest possible launch date for the Artemis II mission following a successful second fueling test of its Space Launch System rocket. The test at Kennedy Space Center resolved issues from an earlier attempt marred by a hydrogen leak. The mission will send four astronauts around the Moon in a crewed test of the Orion spacecraft.

NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is set to launch Artemis II as soon as April 1, 2026, sending four astronauts on a crewed flyby to the Moon's far side—the farthest from Earth any humans have traveled. This follows February's Artemis program adjustments addressing SLS delays, using the rocket's powerful core stage and boosters detailed ahead of liftoff.

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NASA has delayed the Artemis II mission to April 1 following a helium flow problem that rolled the rocket back from the pad, building on prior fixes for hydrogen leaks during fueling tests. This first crewed lunar orbit since 1972 faces ongoing maintenance before returning to the launch site.

 

 

 

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