Artemis II Commander Says Lunar Landing Is Within Reach
Artemis II Commander: Lunar Landing "Absolutely Doable": NASA Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman affirmed post-mission that crewed lunar landings remain "absolutely doable," capping the April 1, 2026, SLS/Orion flyby—first beyond LEO since Apollo 17. Crew (Wiseman, Glover, Koch, Hansen) reached 252,756 miles, surpassing Apollo 13, with flawless trans-lunar injection, free-return trajectory, and Pacific splashdown. Heat shield aced reentry plasma; waste system proved deep-space viable despite glitches—greenlighting Artemis III's 2028 touchdown via commercial landers. Wiseman's optimism, evoking Apollo amid Iran tensions and U.S. Space Force alerts, underpins NASA's $30B lunar base: nuclear power, rovers by 2030s, Mars prelude. Earthrise awe ("impossibly beautiful") persists as auroras flare, comet 3I/ATLAS morphs, Hubble unveils IC 486 galaxy—echoing Apollo 13's April 1970 triumph.
- Apollo 13
- Artemis II
- Artemis III
- Artemis program
- Astronaut Training
- Astronauts
- Barred Spiral Galaxy
- Commercial Lunar Payload Services
- Deep Space Travel
- Future of Space Travel
- Geopolitics
- Heat Shield
- Hubble Telescope
- Interstellar Comet
- lunar exploration
- Lunar Landing
- lunar outpost
- Mars mission
- Moon Landing 2028
- Moon Mission
- NASA
- NASA Missions
- NASA Updates #ArtemisII #NASA #LunarLanding #SpaceExploration #ReidWiseman #OrionSpacecraft #MoonMission #Astronauts #DeepSpace #FutureOfSpace
- Orion spacecraft
- Reid Wiseman
- Solar Storms
- Space Exploration
- Space Force
- Space History
- Space Launch System
- Space News
- Space technology
- Spacecraft Systems
- Waste Management System

0 Comments
Comments are closed.