Artemis II: Humans Head Back to Deep Space

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NASA has confirmed Artemis II, marking the return of humans to deep space after a five-decade gap

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It is NASA’s first crewed mission under the Artemis programme that will send astronauts beyond Earth orbit

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It will be the first human spaceflight to travel beyond Low Earth Orbit since 1972, when Apollo 17 returned from the Moon

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The four astronauts onboard : Reid Wiseman (Commander), Victor Glover (Pilot) and Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen (Mission Specialists) 

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Launch aboard NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS), travel nearly 4 lakh km towards the Moon, perform a lunar flyby and return safely to Earth

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Artemis II will not land on the Moon. The mission is designed to test systems with humans onboard, not surface operations

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Life-support systems, deep-space navigation, crew performance beyond Earth orbit and high-speed re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere

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Since Apollo 17 in 1972, humans stayed in Low Earth Orbit, space stations replaced Moon missions and deep-space travel paused due to cost, risk and priorities

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Ends a 50-year gap in human deep-space travel, Marks the return of humans to the Moon’s vicinity, Reopens the path to lunar exploration

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Apollo aimed for quick Moon landings. Artemis focuses on long-term presence, sustainability and future Mars missions

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Artemis II is the final test before humans land on the Moon again. It is the bridge between past Moon missions and the future of human space exploration.

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