Their dramatic grand finale fast approaching, Artemis II’s astronauts aim for a splashdown in the Pacific on Friday to close out humanity’s first voyage to the moon in more than half a century.
After traveling more than 400,000 miles, NASA's Artemis 2 crew is now within 70,000 miles of Earth as Orion continues its journey home ahead of tonight's splashdown.
As Orion makes its approach, Earth appears as a crescent, a bright curve of blue and white that almost looks like a smile welcoming them home.
The astronauts will wake up at 10:35 a.m. before carrying out a final trajectory correction burn at 1:53 p.m. to fine-tune their path back to Earth.
The tension in Mission Control mounts as the miles melt away between the four returning astronauts and Earth.
All eyes are on the capsule’s life-protecting heat shield that has to withstand thousands of degrees during reentry. On the only other test flight of the spacecraft — in 2022, with no one on board — the shield’s charred exterior came back looking as pockmarked as the moon.
Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canada’s Jeremy Hansen are on track to hit the atmosphere traveling Mach 32 — or 32 times the speed of sound — a blistering blur not seen since NASA’s Apollo moonshots of the 1960s and 1970s.
They don’t plan on taking manual control except in an emergency. Their Orion capsule, dubbed Integrity, is completely self-flying.
The last time NASA and the Defense Department teamed up for a lunar crew’s reentry was Apollo 17 in 1972. Artemis II is projected to come screaming back at 23,840 mph — not a record but still mind-bogglingly fast before slowing to a 19 mph splashdown.
Artemis II didn’t land on the moon or even orbit it. But it broke Apollo 13’s distance record, making Wiseman and his crew the farthest that humans have ever journeyed from Earth when they reached 252,756 miles. Then in the mission’s most heart-tugging scene, the teary astronauts asked permission to name a pair of craters after their moonship and Wiseman’s late wife, Carroll.
During the record-breaking flyby, they documented scenes of the lunar far side never seen before by the naked eye and savored a total solar eclipse courtesy of the cosmos thanks to their launch date. The eclipse, in particular, “just blew all of us away,” Glover said.
Under the revamped Artemis program, next year’s Artemis III will see astronauts practice docking their capsule with a lunar lander or two in orbit around Earth. Artemis IV will attempt to land a crew of two near the moon’s south pole in 2028.
(Photo NASA via AP)
Advertisement
Back from the moon: Artemis II crew streaking toward splashdown today
Advertisement
Latest State & National
State & National
2 hours ago
State & National
14 hours ago
State & National
15 hours ago
State & National
15 hours ago
State & National
16 hours ago
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Read >
ADVERTISEMENT
Latest State & National
State & National
2 hours ago
State & National
14 hours ago
State & National
15 hours ago
State & National
15 hours ago
State & National
16 hours ago
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT