- NASA successfully launched its Artemis II mission from Florida on Wednesday, sending four astronauts on a 10-day, 252,000-mile journey to the Moon.
- This mission marks the first time humans have traveled to the Moon in over half a century, aiming to set a new distance record by flying approximately 4,000 miles beyond the Moon before returning.
- The crew includes commander Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch (the first woman), Victor Glover (the first Black astronaut), and Jeremy Hansen (the first non-U.S. citizen) to journey to the Moon.
- The launch, which utilized NASA's most powerful rocket ever, followed repeated technical delays and is a critical step in the agency's long-term goal of establishing a permanent moon base and landing humans on the lunar surface by 2028.
- After an initial 25 hours in Earth orbit for spacecraft checks, the crew will proceed to the Moon, flying around it without orbiting before heading back for a Pacific splashdown.
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