Artemis, Moon and NASA
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Thanks to NASA's live-stream, you can watch Artemis II's lunar flyby and see the moon mission head deeper into space than ever before. The post Live Stream NASA’s Lunar Flyby as Moon Mission Goes
Astronauts on the Artemis II mission will head around the moon April 6, going farther than humans have ever gone before.
The weather forecast looks good for today's scheduled splashdown of the Artemis II Orion crew module. Tentatively set for shortly after 8 pm. ET/5 pm PT this evening, the splashdown site will be off the coast of San Diego where the Navy's amphibious transport dock ship,
The Artemis II mission is expected to splash down off the coast of California on Friday night around 8:00 p.m., after successfully orbiting the Moon and breaking the record for the furthest from Earth humans have ever gone (their orbit was higher up than past moon missions,
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Watch live: NASA's first crewed moon mission in decades is about to launch
The Artemis II crew during a suit-up and walkout at the Kennedy Space Center in August 2025. (NASA/Kim Shiflett) After years of careful preparation and testing, NASA is finally about to send a crew of astronauts to circle the Moon.