New photo shows moon out window of spacecraft
NASA released an image that was taken Monday showing the moon through the window of the Orion spacecraft as the Artemis II crew drew closer.
The image was taken by the crew before they went to sleep on the fifth day of their journey.
NASA said the crew “entered the lunar sphere of influence” at 12:37 a.m. ET Monday, marking the point at which the moon’s gravity had a stronger pull on them than the Earth’s.
NASA
Crew to wake up soon to break record, conduct lunar flyby
The Artemis II crew is scheduled to wake up at 10:50 a.m. ET Monday, hours before they are expected to break a distance record and conduct a lunar flyby.
After reviewing details of the flyby during a briefing with Mission Control at 1:30 pm ET, the crew is set to make history when they reach 248,655 miles from Earth 26 minutes later, and keep going. That is the record set by Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert aboard Apollo 13 on April 15, 1970.
The moon flyby will then begin at 2:45 p.m. Artemis II will observe both the near and far sides of the moon, ultimately making its closest approach — at 4,070 miles from the surface — at around 7 p.m.
At that distance, NASA said the moon “will appear to the astronauts about the size of a basketball held at arm’s length.” They may become the first humans to see portions of the far side with an unaided eye, according to the agency.
Minutes later, the crew will reach their maximum distance from Earth: 252,760 miles.
They’ll also witness “Earthrise” and try to recreate the famous Apollo 8 photo that coined that name, as well as an hour-long solar eclipse. The flyby is due to end at 9:20 p.m.
Artemis II crew capture photo of far side of the moon
NASA on Sunday released an image of the far side of the moon that the Artemis II crew captured the day before — the fourth day of the astronauts’ journey.
The moon in the image is oriented upside down, with its South Pole facing upward and parts of its far side visible, according to NASA. The Orientale basin, a massive crater that’s hard to see from Earth, is situated along the right edge of the moon in the picture, NASA said, adding that the Artemis II voyage marks the first time humans have ever seen the basin in full.
NASA
The Orientale basin will be an ongoing subject of study for members of the Orion spacecraft’s four-person crew, which includes commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen.
Artemis II astronauts find hidden eggs on Easter Sunday
Artemis II astronauts took time on Sunday to send Easter greetings to Earth, and had their own version of an egg hunt.
Artemis II mission specialist Christina Koch said the crew had hidden eggs around the cabin to mark the holiday. “They were the dehydrated scrambled egg variety,” she said, “but we’re all pretty happy with them.”
Overnight Saturday, Koch said the crew had switched from measuring their increasing distance from Earth to tracking their decreasing distance to the moon. The trip around the moon so far has yielded unexpected detail on its surface, giving scientists a taste of things to come when they pass over the lunar far side Monday.
