NASA’s Artemis 2 mission is poised to take people across the moon for the primary time in over 50 years. The mission is historic: a return to the moon by an astronaut crew that can function the vanguard for what NASA hopes will result in a everlasting outpost on the lunar floor.
Under, you will see an summary of the Artemis 2 mission, meet its four-astronaut crew, and learn about the Space Launch System megarocket and Orion spacecraft making it possible. The episodes debut on March 25, March 26, March 30 and March 31.
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Artemis 2: The mission explained
The Artemis 2 mission is scheduled to take its four-astronaut crew on a 10-day journey past Earth orbit. It is going to swing farther from Earth than any crewed mission since Apollo 17 in 1972, looping across the moon earlier than heading house.
This isn’t a touchdown try — it’s a proving flight. Artemis 2 will take a look at life-support, communications, and deep-space navigation programs — the whole lot we’ll must dwell and work on the moon for actual.
This is a have a look at how the mission will work, what its main targets are all through its 10 days and what the Artemis 2 astronauts will do throughout their circumlunar flight.
March 26: Meet the Artemis 2 crew
On March 26, in our “Meet the Artemis 2 Crew” episode, you’ll meet mission commander Reid Wiseman, a retired U.S. Navy captain and test pilot who’s served as NASA’s Chief Astronaut. He leads a team that includes pilot Victor Glover, a test pilot, Navy captain and the first Black astronaut to live long-term on the International Space Station; mission specialist Christina Koch, an engineer and the record-holder for the longest spaceflight by a woman; and mission specialist Jeremy Hansen, a Canadian Space Agency astronaut making his first flight to space.
Together, these four astronauts will become the first Artemis astronauts to visit the moon and, just possibly, fly the farthest from Earth than any human before them.
March 30: Space Launch System — The megarocket
Coming on March 30, you’ll meet the muscle behind the Artemis 2 mission, NASA’s Space Launch System rocket (or SLS for short).
Standing 322 feet tall, the SLS is taller than the Statue of Liberty and is NASA’s most powerful rocket since the Apollo program’s mighty Saturn V. It’s a two-stage booster and is designed to do what no rocket has in over 50 years: send humans back into deep space.
Let’s see what it takes to build NASA’s newest giant rocket.
March 31: Orion — NASA’s new moon ship
On March 31, one day before launch, we’ll complete our video series with Orion, NASA’s new moon ship.
Orion is built to handle the harshest environment humans have ever faced: extreme radiation, massive temperature swings, and the deep-space vacuum. It’s packed with cutting-edge tech — from its launch abort system that can pull the crew to safety in seconds, to its heat shield, the largest ever built, protecting them on reentry at 25,000 miles an hour. And yes, there’s even a toilet.
Here’s a look inside Orion and how it will carry its astronaut crew to the moon.
Get ready for liftoff
So there you have it, space fans. Those are the basics of NASA’s Artemis 2 moon mission. We hope this helped as NASA prepares to restart humanity’s journey into deep space.
Be sure to visit Space.com on April 1 for complete coverage of the Artemis 2 moon mission. We’ll be covering the mission live from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at launch, as well as from the Johnson Space Center in Houston during the flght. And if you’re wondering how to express your moon mission excitement, we’ve got a guide to the best Artemis 2 gear you can get right now.