NASA is shooting for the moon. A guide to the Artemis II mission
A full moon is seen shining over NASA's SLS (Space Launch System) and Orion spacecraft atop the mobile launcher in the early hours of Feb. 1, 2026, at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (Sam Lott/NASA via AP, File) 2026-03-31T12:03:46Z CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — It’s humanity’s first flight to the moon since 1972.
In a throwback to Apollo , NASA’s Artemis II mission will send four astronauts on a lunar fly-around.
They’ll hurtle several thousand miles beyond the moon, hang a U-turn and then come straight back.
No circling around the moon, no stopping for a moonwalk — just a quick out-and-back lasting less than 10 days.
NASA promises more boot prints in the gray lunar dust, but not before a couple practice missions.
The upcoming test flight by Artemis astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen is the first step in settling the moon this time around.
Here’s a snapshot of the Artemis II mission.
The Artemis astronauts are a diverse and international crew The moon is about to welcome its first woman, first person of color and first non-American.
Koch already holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman.
During her 328-day mission at the International Space Station spanning 2019 and 2020, she took part in the first all-female spacewalk.
Glover, a Navy test pilot, was the first Black astronaut to live and work aboard the space station in 2020 and 2021.
He also was one of the first astronauts to launch with SpaceX.
The Canadian Space Agency’s Hansen, a former fighter pilot, is the lone space rookie.
Their commander is Wiseman, a retired Navy captain who lived aboard the space station in 2014 and later headed NASA’s astronaut corps.
They range in age from 47 to 50.
The Space Launch System is more powerful than the Saturn V rocket NASA’s new Space Launch System rocket stands 322 feet (98 meters), shorter than the Apollo program’s Saturn V rocket but more powerful at liftoff thanks to a pair of strap-on boosters.
Atop the rocket is the Orion capsule carrying the astronauts.
Made of salvaged space shuttle engines and other parts, the SLS uses the same fuel — liquid hydrogen — as the shuttles did.
Hydrogen leaks repeatedly grounded the shuttles as well as the first SLS rocket test without astronauts aboard in 2022.
More than three years later, Artemis II suffered the same hydrogen leaks during a February fueling practice run, missing the first launch window.
A repeat of helium-flow iss
原文链接: AP News
