
ABOARD ORION SPACECRAFT—NASA’s Artemis 2 crew has blasted past the halfway point to the Moon, leaving Earth as a shrinking blue marble in their rearview while hurtling toward a landmark flyby not seen in over half a century.
The four astronauts—Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen—marked the milestone around 2 days, 5 hours, and 24 minutes after liftoff from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center on Thursday. NASA’s dashboard clocked Orion at over 229,000 kilometers (142,000 miles) from home early Saturday, with the Moon now gleaming through the docking hatch.
“It’s a beautiful sight,” Koch shared during a live NASA broadcast around 11 p.m. Friday (0400 GMT), capturing the crew’s “expression of joy” at the news. Stunning images released by the agency showed Earth in full glory: swirling white clouds over deep blue oceans, a vivid reminder of the fragile world they’re leaving behind.
Zero-G Thrills and Deep-Space Checks
After a nail-biting launch and a critical engine burn that slung them moonward, the crew settled into the rhythm of deep space. Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, on his first spaceflight, bubbled with excitement during a Thursday Q&A.
“There’s been tremendous disbelief—it’s just so extraordinary,” Hansen said. “I really like it up here. The views are extraordinary, and floating in zero gravity makes me feel like a little kid again.”
His teammates echoed the high spirits. All systems green, per NASA, with the astronauts tackling equipment tests, a CPR demo, medical kit inventories, and prep for lunar science observations on day six. They’ve even chatted with family back home, staying in “great spirits” amid the void.
NASA’s Lakiesha Hawkins hailed photos snapped by Wiseman as “amazing” in a Friday briefing. “We’re learning our spacecraft in deep space with crew for the first time, day by day,” she noted.
Lunar Milestone Looms
Next up: Orion slips into the Moon’s “sphere of influence” overnight Sunday-Monday, when lunar gravity overtakes Earth’s pull. Early next week, they’ll loop the Moon—a path last trod by Apollo 17 in 1972—potentially shattering records by venturing farther from Earth than any humans before (up to 250,000 miles out).
“There’s nothing normal about this,” Wiseman marveled Thursday. “Sending four humans this far is Herculean, and we’re just grasping the gravity of it.”
This 10-day test flight paves NASA’s return to the Moon, aiming for a permanent base as a launchpad to Mars. Artemis 2 builds on uncrewed Artemis 1’s 2022 success, with diverse crew (first Canadian, first woman, first Black astronaut on lunar trajectory) inspiring global dreams—from U.S. hubs to emerging space players like Nigeria’s NASRDA eyeing satellite tech.
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