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And then the Zac Brown Band:

What’s next on the Artemis playlist?

a headshot of Kenna Hughes-Castleberry

Kenna Hughes-Castleberry

It’s nearly wake-up time

The view from Integrity

A view of Earth from the Artemis II Orion capsule

(Image credit: NASA)

And here’s the view from Integrity’s solar array wing camera.

“The Earth will grow larger and larger in the field of view as we continue to move throughout the day,” Navias said.

NASA coverage begins

A visualization of the Orion capsule's position in space.

(Image credit: NASA)

Rob Navias has appeared on NASA’s livestream to kick off the agency’s live coverage of the landing, and has also shared a handy visualization of where Orion is currently at.

“As you can see from this computer generated graphic based on real time telemetry, we are currently just 67,000 miles from the Earth,” Navias said. “We passed the halfway mark last night between the Earth and the Moon, and are 186,000 miles from the moon as we close in on the planet Earth.”

What does it feel like to disappear behind the moon?

A dark sphere is backlit with streaks of white light in the darkness of space.

(Image credit: NASA)

The “overview effect,” is a term invented by the science philosopher Frank White to describe the shift in perspective humans feel when they see Earth from space — especially how small and vulnerable our patch of cosmic oasis appears against the uninhabitable and vast backdrop that surrounds it.

When asked what it felt like to disappear behind the moon and lose radio contact with Earth, Artemis II pilot Victor Glover expressed a similar sentiment.

Artemis II — The Movie?

Buzz Lightyear

(Image credit: Getty Images)

During the same in-flight news conference, the astronauts were also asked who they would want to play them in a movie.

“We’ve thought a little about the movie, and I think that’s way out of our pay grade,” Reid Wiseman said. “But one thing we do know for sure is that this guy [pointing at Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen] is gonna be played by Buzz Lightyear. 100%. No doubt.”

The crew’s final reflections on their mission

While we can’t exactly give you the inside story on the contents of the crews’ dreams right now, we can at least tell you some of their reflections upon their historic journey before they went to bed.

When asked what they would tell their younger selves about what they’re doing right now, Christina Koch recalled a family vacation she took to Kennedy Space Centre at age 10.

What are the Artemis II astronauts doing right now?

What time is splashdown?

Headshot of Patrick Pester

Patrick Pester

So what about the parachutes?

Parachutes deploy behind the falling Artemis I Orion capsule.

NASA’s unmanned Orion spaceship comes in for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off Baja California, Mexico, on Dec. 11, 2022. (Image credit: Mario Tama/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

The heat shield’s durability is certainly the big question today, but what about those parachutes Ben just mentioned?

The Orion spacecraft is fitted with 11 total parachutes, all deployed in a very specific sequence to slow, stabilize and safely lower the capsule into the ocean. They includes three forward bay cover parachutes, two drogue parachutes, three pilot parachutes and three main parachutes.

Feeling the heat

A photo of the Artemis I Orion capsule in the ocean after splashdown.

NASA discovered a heat shield issue on the Artemis I Orion capsule after it splashed down in 2022. (Image credit: NASA)

The speed at which the Artemis II crew will return to Earth is set to be record-breaking — hitting the top of the atmosphere at around 25,000 miles per hour (40,000 kilometers per hour).

To dissipate all that energy and arrive at a much more reasonable 20 mph (32 kph) splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego, the Orion capsule will use two key pieces of technology: parachutes and a heat shield.

What goes up

NASA's Orion capsule captured this footage of its reentry to Earth's atmosphere on Dec. 11, 2022, at the end of the Artemis 1 moon mission.

Footage from NASA’s Artemis I Orion capsule as it reentered Earth’s atmosphere on Dec. 11, 2022. (Image credit: NASA)

Good morning, science fans! We’re back to cover the nail-biting final stage of the Artemis II mission, which has seen a four-astronaut crew embark on a 685,000-mile (1.1 million kilometers) 10-day journey around the moon and back.

The crew — consisting of commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen — have captivated millions around the world with their voyage, beaming back stunning images, scientific insights, laughter and some tears as they made history and laid the groundwork for humanity’s return to the moon.

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