Artemis II successfully splashes down, completing historic lunar mission
NASA said the four astronauts completed a 10-day test flight and became the farthest humans from Earth at 252,756 miles.
- On Friday, April 10, 2026, NASA's Artemis II crew splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego, concluding a historic 10-day lunar mission aboard the Orion capsule, nicknamed Integrity.
- Launched April 1, 2026, from Kennedy Space Center, the four-person crew—Commander Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen—traveled 252,756 miles from Earth, setting a new record for human deep-space distance.
- During re-entry, the Orion capsule endured temperatures reaching 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit; after a six-minute communications blackout, the spacecraft deployed three main parachutes to stabilize descent.
- U.S. Navy recovery teams aboard the USS John P. Murtha retrieved the crew shortly after splashdown; a medical officer confirmed all four astronauts were healthy and ready to return to Houston.
- With Artemis II complete, NASA turns attention to the Artemis III mission, slated for 2027, to test integrated operations with commercial moon landers as a stepping stone toward establishing a long-term lunar presence.
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NASA's Artemis II mission has been successfully concluded this Friday after the return to Earth of its...
Back from the moon: Artemis astronauts safely return to Earth
After 9 days and 21 hours, NASA’s Artemis astronauts safely returned to Earth late Friday, April 10, splashing down in the ocean after completing the latest phase of the agency’s renewed push toward the moon. The crew traveled aboard the Orion capsule (that they dubbed “Integrity”), which reentered Earth’s atmosphere before deploying parachutes and landing in a designated recovery zone, where teams quickly moved in to retrieve both the spacecraf…
Artemis II crew safely splashes down after successful mission around the moon
The Artemis II crew safely returned to Earth on Friday, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean as planned after its 10-day journey around the moon and back. NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen splashed down off the coast of…
The first humans who have been near the moon for more than 50 years are back on Earth. Spectacular images show the fiery re-entry of the "Orion" capsule into the Earth's atmosphere. The three Americans Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch as well as the Canadian Jeremy Hansen moved 406.773 kilometers from the Earth at their moon orbit – further than any other human being.The four "Artemis 2" astronauts landed in space after about ten d…
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