Riskiest part of the Artemis II moon mission is still ahead
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The Artemis II crew flew farther from Earth than any humans in history as they passed over the far side of the moon on Monday night.
As the historic lunar flyby comes to a close, space companies and nations around the world are also shooting for the moon. Upcoming landings aim to change the landscape of space exploration
The crew of Artemis II made history this week, traveling farther into space than any human before. The moments that followed were sentimental as they chose for some of their first words to be the naming of a crater on the moon after the commander’s wife,
Orion will slam into Earth's atmosphere at more than 30 times the speed of sound, in what NASA expects to be the most demanding part of the Artemis II moon mission.
The crew of Artemis II just captured a series of dazzling images of the Earth and moon.
Ildar Ibatullin confirmed to PolitiFact via Instagram that those are his images and they were captured from Earth using a reflector telescope and a DSLR camera, not taken by NASA or from the Artemis II mission.
As the Artemis missions work to build a permanent lunar home, we should remember why we ever went up there in the first place.
Over seven hours, the astronauts took thousands of photos that will help inform scientists’ understanding of the moon. The first ones have now been released.
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Russia claims the moon as sovereign territory
Russia says it will carve out sovereign lunar territory by 2036, violating a treaty it signed in 1967, which still puts it ahead of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum speedrun by a comfortable margin.