Artemis II, Nasa’s first crewed lunar rocket in more than half a century, prepares for launch – watch and follow live | Space

April 1, 2026:

Artemis II, Nasa’s first crewed lunar rocket in more than half a century, prepares for launch – watch and follow live | Space

The Artemis II mission

Artemis II is the second flight, and first crewed mission, of the core component of Nasa’s Moon to Mars initiative, which aims to build a permanent, habitable lunar base as a prelude to eventual human flights to the red planet.

Assuming a successful launch on Wednesday, it will be a 10-day fly past of the moon, with no landing, in which the four astronauts will travel farther into space, just short of 253,000 miles, than any human beings before them.

The objectives are to test crucial spacecraft and life support systems, monitor extensively the astronauts’ health during a long-duration spaceflight, specifically the enhanced effects of radiation and microgravity, and confirm the ability of the Orion capsule to withstand temperatures up to 3,000F (1650C) at re-entry.

The highlight for the crew will be on flight day six, when Orion will slingshot around the moon and pass between 4,000 and 6,000 miles from the lunar surface, providing opportunities to photograph the moon’s south pole where the next human landing will take place as early as 2028.

Nasa has published a comprehensive, day-by-day schedule of the Artemis II mission timeline here.

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Key events

The Artemis II crew will be arriving at the launchpad shortly after an emotional farewell with their families at the Neil A Armstrong operations and checkout building at Kennedy Space Center.

They posed for photographs and waved their goodbyes with heart signs and air kisses, not being allowed to hug their loved ones because of quarantine protocols.

The astronauts boarded a silver astrovan for the journey to launchpad 39B, with military helicopters overhead and several security vehicles following at a close distance.

The next launch milestone will be the crew walking around and checking out their 322ft (98m) rocket ship from the ground before ascending in the elevator to the Orion crew capsule.

Astronauts head to launch pad – loop

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