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Artemis II moon crew flies farther than humans have ever gone before

The four astronauts of NASA’s Artemis II mission flew deeper into space on Monday than any humans before them, as they cruised through a rare flyby of the shadowed far side of the moon that revealed a lunar surface under cosmic bombardment.

The six-hour survey of the normally hidden hemisphere of Earth’s only natural satellite was highlighted by the astronauts’ direct visual observations of “impact flashes” from meteors pelting the darkened and heavily cratered lunar surface.

About two dozen scientists packed a conference room adjacent to mission control at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston to record the lunar phenomena witnessed by the Artemis crew in real time as their Orion spacecraft, about the size of an SUV, sailed around the moon roughly a quarter million miles (402,000 km) from Earth.

The six-hour flyby, which swooped to within 4,070 miles of the lunar surface, came six days into a spaceflight marking the world’s first voyage of astronauts to the vicinity of the moon since NASA’s Cold War-era Apollo missions more than half a century ago.

Milestones in NASA’s Artemis moon program

2017–2018: PROGRAM REVIVED

During President Donald Trump’s first administration, NASA was directed to refocus human spaceflight on the moon after years of prioritizing Mars. The lunar effort would be built around the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion crew capsule, hardware first conceived under the previous, since-canceled Constellation program, with Boeing BA.N serving as the prime contractor for the SLS core stage, Northrop Grumman NOC.N producing the rocket’s solid-fuel boosters and Lockheed Martin LMT.N building the Orion spacecraft.

2019: ACCELERATED TIMELINE SET

In 2019, the White House set a target of landing astronauts on the moon by 2024. Though the “Moon to Mars” program would not get its name Artemis until months later, NASA outlined a three-mission sequence: Artemis I, an uncrewed test flight; Artemis II, a crewed moon flyby; and Artemis III, a landing on the lunar surface.

2020–2021: DELAYS MOUNT, MOON LANDER SELECTED

Technical challenges, cost overruns and COVID-19 pandemic-related disruptions pushed back schedules for the SLS rocket, Orion spacecraft and launch infrastructure at Kennedy Space Center. NASA picked SpaceX’s Starship as the program’s first lunar lander, keeping the landing target of 2024 but acknowledging it may no longer be achievable.

2022: ARTEMIS I FLIES

In November 2022, NASA launched Artemis I, sending an uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the moon and back during a 25-day mission. The flight tested deep-space navigation, communications and Orion’s heat shield during a high-speed reentry, a critical step before flying with astronauts.

2023–2024: PROGRAM RECALIBRATED

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is tapped as NASA’s second lunar lander provider in 2023 after months of legal disputes over the agency’s decision to only pick SpaceX’s Starship. Later, under President Joe Biden’s administration, NASA reset Artemis timelines, pushing the first crewed lunar landing to 2027. The agency continued to defend the program amid budget scrutiny, while highlighting China’s parallel lunar ambitions.

2024: ARTEMIS II CREW NAMED

NASA announced the four astronauts for Artemis II: Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen. The mission will be the first crewed voyage toward the Moon since Apollo 17 in 1972.

2026: ARTEMIS PROGRAM OVERHAULED UNDER NEW LEADERSHIP

After taking office, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced a sweeping overhaul of the Artemis program, scrapping plans for the Lunar Gateway — a space station intended to orbit the moon — and redirecting its components toward building a permanent base on the lunar surface. He also added an additional crewed mission ahead of a lunar landing, arguing that the extra flight would help crews and ground teams build operational “muscle memory” in deep space before attempting sustained surface missions.

April 2026: ARTEMIS II MISSION AROUND THE MOON

NASA launched Artemis II, a roughly 10-day mission sending four astronauts on a crewed flyby of the moon, the first such voyage since the Apollo era. The mission will not land on the lunar surface but will push astronauts farther from Earth than any human flight, testing Orion’s life-support systems, navigation, communications and heat shield performance in deep space — capabilities NASA says are essential before attempting a lunar landing.

LATER THIS DECADE: MOON LANDING PLANNED

Artemis is intended to return astronauts to the lunar surface using a commercially developed lander, a step NASA says is essential before future missions to Mars. Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin are competing to provide the lunar lander, part of NASA’s push to enlist private companies in delivering hardware for deep‑space exploration. The first moon-walking Artemis crew is expected to take whichever lander completes development first.

Six of those missions landed two-man teams on the moon between 1969 and 1972 – the only 12 humans ever to walk on its surface.

Artemis, a successor to the Apollo program, aims to repeat that achievement by 2028, ahead of China’s first landing, and to establish a long-term U.S. lunar presence over the next decade, including a moon base to serve as a proving ground for potential future missions to Mars.

While designed as a crewed dress rehearsal for future lunar excursions, Artemis II generated a wealth of new material for lunar scientists to study, including meteor impact flashes recorded during Monday’s flyby that were reminiscent of sparks and streaks of light described by some of Apollo’s astronauts.

The Artemis II crew, riding in their Orion capsule since launching from Florida last week, began their sixth day of spaceflight as they awoke on Monday to a pre-recorded message from the late NASA astronaut Jim Lovell, who flew aboard the Apollo 8 and Apollo 13 moon missions.

“Welcome to my old neighborhood,” said Lovell, who died last year at age 97. “It’s a historic day, and I know how busy you’ll be, but don’t forget to enjoy the view… good luck and Godspeed.”

Hours later, the crew consisting of U.S. astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch along with Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, made spaceflight history by venturing farther from Earth than any humans have before, at 252,756 miles.

The previous record, roughly 248,000 miles, was set in 1970 by Apollo 13 after a nearly catastrophic spacecraft malfunction cut short that mission, forcing Lovell and his two crewmates to use the moon’s gravity to help return them safely to Earth.

NAMING CRATERS

En route to the far side of the moon, the Artemis astronauts spent some time assigning provisional new names to lunar features that previously lacked official designations.

In a radio message to mission control in Houston, Hansen suggested one crater be dubbed Integrity, after the name given to the crew’s Orion capsule, and that another be named in honor of Wiseman’s late wife, Carroll, who died of cancer in 2020.

“A number of years ago we started this journey, our close-knit astronaut family, and we lost a loved one,” Hansen said of the mission commander’s late spouse, his voice choking with emotion as he described the position of her lunar namesake. “It’s a bright spot on the Moon, and we would like to call that Carroll.”

Hansen later said the crew had viewed a number of lunar features that “no human has ever seen before, not even in Apollo.”

As Orion hurtled around the moon’s far side, the astronauts photographed a rare moment in which Earth, dwarfed by their record-breaking distance from the planet, set and rose with the lunar horizon as they swung around the moon, a striking celestial reversal of the rising and setting moon typically seen from Earth.

Because the moon rotates at the same speed as it revolves around the Earth, its far side always faces away from our planet and only the Artemis and Apollo astronauts have ever gazed directly on its surface.

RARE DETAILED PHOTOS

Monday’s lunar flyby plunged the crew into darkness and a 40-minute communications blackout as the moon blocked them from NASA’s Deep Space Network, a global array of massive radio communications antennas the agency has been using to talk to the crew.

Following the flyby, U.S. President Donald Trump congratulated the four crew members on an audio link from the White House as they appeared on camera by live satellite feed from space.

“Today, you’ve made history and made all America really proud, incredibly proud,” Trump said. “You’ve really inspired the entire world. Really, everybody’s watching.”

Koch told Trump that one of her most unforgettable moments of the flyby was “coming back from the far side of the moon and having the first glimpses of planet Earth again.”

Asked by the president how they felt when all communication with Earth was cut off as Orion flew behind the moon, Glover answered, “I said a little prayer, but then I had to keep rolling.”

Ria.city






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