World

Artemis II returns safely after historic lunar flyby, marking new era in human spaceflight

First crewed mission beyond the Moon in more than 50 years concludes with Pacific splashdown, clearing a crucial hurdle for future lunar landings and ambitions for Mars

Updated 3 months ago · Published on 11 Apr 2026 9:04AM

Artemis II returns safely after historic lunar flyby, marking new era in human spaceflight
The mission travelled a total of 694,392 miles (1,117,515 km), including two Earth orbits and a sweeping flyby of the Moon at a distance of about 252,000 miles - April 11, 2026

THE Artemis II crew has safely returned to Earth after a landmark journey to the vicinity of the Moon, completing the first human deep-space mission of its kind in more than half a century and paving the way for a renewed era of lunar exploration.

NASA’s Orion capsule, named Integrity, re-entered Earth’s atmosphere and splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off Southern California on Friday evening, concluding a mission that carried astronauts farther into space than any before.

Reuters reported on Saturday that the gumdrop-shaped spacecraft endured a dramatic 13-minute descent through the atmosphere, generating temperatures of approximately 5,000°F (2,760°C) as intense friction enveloped the capsule in plasma, temporarily severing communications with the crew.

Contact was restored as parachutes deployed, slowing the spacecraft to a gentle splashdown, where recovery teams moved in to secure the vehicle and retrieve the four astronauts for initial medical checks.

On board were American astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, alongside Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, marking a diverse crew that made history on multiple fronts.

The mission travelled a total of 694,392 miles (1,117,515 km), including two Earth orbits and a sweeping flyby of the Moon at a distance of about 252,000 miles, exceeding the record set during Apollo 13.

Launched on 1 April from Cape Canaveral aboard the Space Launch System, Artemis II represents the first crewed test flight in NASA’s Artemis programme, which aims to return humans to the lunar surface by 2028 for the first time since Apollo 17.

The successful return marks a critical validation of the Orion spacecraft, built by Lockheed Martin, demonstrating its ability to withstand the extreme conditions of a high-speed lunar re-entry trajectory.

Engineers had modified the capsule’s re-entry profile following heat shield concerns observed during the uncrewed Artemis I test flight, making the latest mission a key proving ground for future crewed landings.

Beyond its technical achievements, Artemis II also carries geopolitical significance, as the United States seeks to reassert leadership in lunar exploration amid competition with China, echoing the strategic undertones of the Cold War-era Apollo programme.

The broader Artemis initiative is intended to establish a sustained human presence on the Moon, laying the groundwork for eventual crewed missions to Mars. - April 11, 2026

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