Artemis, Earth
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Does an Artemis II photo taken in April 2026 show the same cloud patterns as an Apollo 8 photo from 1968? No, that's not true: The "Artemis 2" image, dated April 6, 2026, is AI-generated and is based
Lunar love knows no bounds. Artemis II's astronauts took a poignant page from Apollo 8 earlier this week, proposing deeply personal names for a pair of lunar craters.
N o mission to the Moon would be complete without its own conspiracy theories. You can spend billions of dollars sending humans hundreds of thousands of miles across space and take all the photos and make all the scientific observations you like, but a small community of people will still cry "FAKE!"
Elon Musk shared exterior video footage Monday night on X of NASA's Artemis II spacecraft during its closest approach to the lunar surface, captioning the clip "NASA Artemis passing close to the
Digital Camera World on MSN
Mind-bending Artemis II photos show what a solar eclipse looks like from space
Photos from Aretmis II offer a glimpse at what it was like for the astronauts to experience a 54-minute solar eclipse from the dark side of the moon
Religion News Service on MSN
Faith has always gone to space. Artemis II shows how much it has changed.
(RNS) — Both Apollo 8 and Artemis II missions included public references to religion, but astronauts aboard the Artemis’ Orion spacecraft struck a broader, more global tone.
As NASA’s Artemis II astronauts journey back to Earth following their breathtaking close encounter with the moon earlier this week, the space agency has just shared some stunning footage (below) of the rocket launch that sent the crew on its way on April 1.
Do they see a bad moon rising? After multiple delays this year, Artemis II is slated to blast off Wednesday night, April 1, marking the first crewed mission to the moon since the Apollo astronauts touched down in 1972.
The astronauts of NASA's Artemis II mission spoke with reporters in their first press conference from space on Wednesday (April 8). Mission specialist Christina Koch and pilot Victor Glover reflected on their journey to the far side of the moon as the Artemis II crew heads back to Earth.