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Artemis II Is Behind the Moon Right Now — Here Is What the Crew Is Actually Doing

| 2 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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The Artemis II crew has completed its key burn and is heading for lunar orbit. Here is the mission timeline, what the crew is experiencing, and what happens next.

NASA's Artemis II mission — the first crewed lunar journey since Apollo 17 in 1972 — is in its current flight phase with the crew having completed a key burn that sent the Orion capsule toward the moon for its close lunar flyby. NPR's April 3 reporting confirmed the burn completion and described the mission's current status: four astronauts travelling further from Earth than any humans in 54 years.

The crew: Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover (the first Black American to participate in a lunar mission), Mission Specialist Christina Koch (the first woman on a lunar-trajectory mission), and Canadian Space Agency Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen (the first non-American on a lunar trajectory mission).

The mission timeline: the nine-and-a-half-day mission involves translunar injection, a close lunar flyby at approximately 6,500 kilometres from the lunar surface, and a free-return trajectory that uses the moon's gravity to swing the spacecraft back toward Earth without requiring a second engine burn. This specific trajectory is the safest possible lunar mission design, providing automatic return capability if the service module engine fails.

What the crew is experiencing: the specific sensory and psychological reality of deep space travel that no living humans have experienced since December 1972 — Earth visible as a sphere from a distance that makes its fragility visible in a way that low Earth orbit does not provide. The specific monitoring tasks and system checks that the mission requires alongside the specific wonder of the view.

For the mission's purpose: Artemis II is a test mission for the systems — Orion capsule, Space Launch System rocket, lunar trajectory navigation — that Artemis III will use for the first lunar landing since 1972. Every system function performed by Artemis II's crew validates Artemis III's specific capability to land on the lunar south pole.

The CNN correspondent's report that crew members received 'a chilling warning message as they cross the point of no return' — the specific moment when the trajectory is committed to the lunar flyby — is the detail whose psychological weight is worth sitting with: four human beings, irrevocably committed to a path that takes them behind the moon, out of radio contact with Earth, for a specific time.

#artemis#moon#nasa#crew#space#2026
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