NASA’s Orion spacecraft with Artemis II crewmembers
NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, commander; Victor Glover, pilot; Christina Koch,
mission specialist; and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen,
mission specialist aboard was seen as it splashed down at 5:07 p.m. PDT in the
Pacific Ocean off the coast of California, Friday, April 10, 2026. NASA’s
Artemis II mission took Wiseman, Glover, Koch, and Hansen on a 10-day journey
around the Moon and back to Earth.
Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky
The first astronauts to travel to the
Moon in more than half a century are back on Earth after a record-setting
mission aboard NASA’s Artemis II test flight.
NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor
Glover, and Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy
Hansen splashed down at 5:07 p.m. PDT Friday off the coast of San Diego,
completing a nearly 10-day journey that took them 252,756 miles from home at
their farthest distance from Earth.
“Reid, Victor, Christina, and Jeremy,
welcome home, and congratulations on a truly historic achievement. NASA is
grateful to President Donald Trump and partners in Congress for providing the
mandate and resources that made this mission and the future of Artemis
possible,” said NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman. “Artemis II demonstrated
extraordinary skill, courage, and dedication as the crew pushed Orion, SLS
(Space Launch System), and human exploration farther than ever before. As the
first astronauts to fly this rocket and spacecraft, the crew accepted
significant risk in service of the knowledge gained and the future we are
determined to build. NASA also acknowledges the contributions of the entire
NASA workforce, along with our international partners, whose expertise and
commitment were essential to this mission’s success. With Artemis II complete,
focus now turns confidently toward assembling Artemis III and preparing to
return to the lunar surface, build the base, and never give up the Moon again.”
After splashdown in the Pacific Ocean,
the astronauts were met by a combined NASA and U.S. military team that assisted
them out of the spacecraft in open water and transported them via helicopter to
the USS John P. Murtha for initial medical checkouts. The crew members are
expected to return to NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston on Saturday, April
11.
During their mission, Wiseman, Glover,
Koch, and Hansen flew 694,481 miles in total. Their lunar flyby took them
farther than any humans have ever traveled before, surpassing the previous
distance record set by Apollo 13 astronauts in 1970.
The first Artemis crew launched on NASA’s SLS rocket at 6:35 p.m. April 1, from Launch Pad 39B at
the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. With 8.8 million pounds of thrust
at liftoff, the American-built rocket propelled the crew inside the Orion
spacecraft to space, delivering it to orbit with pinpoint accuracy after a
smooth countdown conducted by the agency’s Artemis launch control team.
During the first day in space, the
astronauts and teams on the ground checked out the spacecraft — named Integrity
by the crew — to confirm all systems were healthy ahead of the transit to the
Moon. NASA also deployed four CubeSats from international partners to Earth
orbit.
On the second day of the test flight,
with all systems Go, Orion’s service module fired its main engine, placing the
astronauts on a trajectory that brought them 4,067 miles above the lunar
surface at their closest approach.
“The Artemis II crew is home. The entry,
descent, and landing systems performed as designed and the final test was
completed as intended. This moment belongs to the thousands of people across
fourteen countries who built, tested, and trusted this vehicle. Their work
protected four human lives traveling at 25,000 miles per hour and brought them
safely back to Earth,” said NASA Associate Administrator Amit Kshatriya.
“Artemis II proved the vehicle, the teams, the architecture, and the
international partnership that will return humanity to the lunar surface. Reid,
Victor, Christina, and Jeremy carried the hopes of this world farther than
humans have traveled in more than half a century. Fifty‑three years ago,
humanity left the Moon. This time, we returned to stay. The future is ours to
win.”
With astronauts aboard for the first
time, engineers put Orion through a full in‑flight evaluation. The crew tested
the spacecraft’s life support systems, confirming Orion can sustain humans in
deep space. During several piloting demonstrations, crew members took manual
control of the spacecraft, flying Orion to validate its handling and collect
data that will guide future rendezvous and docking operations with human-rated
landers during Artemis III and beyond.
The crew completed a series of tests to
inform how NASA will fly future missions to the Moon, including evaluations of
how the spacecraft operates during crew exercise, emergency equipment and
procedures, the Orion crew survival system spacesuits, and other critical
spacecraft systems.
Wiseman, Glover, Koch, and Hansen also
supported scientific investigations to help NASA prepare astronauts to live and
work on the Moon as the agency builds a Moon Base and looks toward Mars. These
experiments — including the AVATAR investigation, which studies how human tissue responds to
microgravity and the deep space radiation environment, and other human research
performance studies — are gathering essential health data for long-duration
missions.
During their April 6 lunar flyby, the
astronauts captured more than 7,000 images of the lunar surface and a solar eclipse, during which the Moon blocked the Sun
from Orion’s vantage point. The imagery includes striking views of earthset and earthrise, impact craters,
ancient lava flows, our Milky Way galaxy, and surface fractures and color
variations across the lunar terrain.
They documented the topography along the
terminator — the boundary between lunar day and night — where low-angle
sunlight casts long shadows across the surface, creating illumination
conditions similar to those in the South Pole region where astronauts are
scheduled to land in 2028. The crew also proposed potential names for two lunar craters and reported meteoroid impact flashes on the night side of the
Moon.
Artemis II science will pave the way for
future missions to the Moon’s surface by helping advance mission operations and
training astronauts to use well-informed judgment to identify areas of high
interest for science and exploration.
With the crew safely on Earth, NASA and
its partners now will turn attention to preparing for next year’s Artemis III
mission, when a new Orion crew will test integrated operations with
commercially built Moon landers in low Earth orbit.
As part of a Golden Age of innovation
and exploration, NASA will send Artemis astronauts on increasingly challenging
missions to explore more of the Moon for scientific discovery, economic
benefits, establish an enduring human presence on the lunar surface, and
lay the groundwork for sending the first astronauts – American astronauts –
to Mars.
To learn more about the Artemis program, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/artemis
Bethany
Stevens / Rachel Kraft
Headquarters, Washington
Source: NASA Welcomes Record-Setting Artemis II Moonfarers Back to Earth - NASA

