NASA delays Artemis 2 moon launch to Mar.
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Artemis II, the next mission in NASA’s Artemis program to explore the Moon, is scheduled to launch from Florida within the coming weeks. The mission will be the first crewed mission to the vicinity of the Moon since 1972, with the four-person crew expected to travel farther than any other human mission in spaceflight history.
NASA plans to launch the Crew-12 mission earlier than intended after a medical evacuation at the ISS. But could the Artemis 2 mission delay it?
NASA's Artemis II mission looks to be as little as a couple of weeks away. The middle child of the three-part Artemis project, this mission will allow humans to swing by the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years. It also hopes to pave the way for even more ambitious missions in the future.
These four astronauts are set to get onboard NASA's Artemis 2 mission, which will send astronauts back to the moon for the first time since its famous Apollo 17 trip in 1972
NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen could launch on a trip around the moon as early as Feb. 8, traveling farther from Earth than humanity has ever gone before.
The situation marked a rare medical emergency that prompted an early return from the ISS, highlighting how crews manage serious health events in space.
NASA’s next Moon astronauts have entered strict quarantine which will last two weeks in a major sign that their historic Artemis II mission is just weeks away from launch
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 mission returned safely to Earth after 167 days in orbit, completing hundreds of hours of research aboard the International Space Station.
This fall, students at North High School will get to speak with astronauts aboard the International Space Station.