Artemis astronauts pass half-way point on way to Moon
Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques, of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), talks about the Artemis II lunar mission to attendees of a viewing party of the Artemis II launch, in Longueuil, near Montreal, Quebec, on April 1, 2026. Photo by ANDREJ IVANOV / AFP
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The four Artemis astronauts have passed the halfway point
between Earth and the Moon on the way to their planned lunar flyby, NASA said
on Friday evening.
"You are now closer to the moon than you are to us on
Earth," mission control told the astronauts at around 11 pm (0400 GMT),
according to the space agency's official live broadcast.
"We all kind of had a collective, I guess, expression
of joy at that... We can see the Moon out of the docking hatch right now, it is
a beautiful sight," said astronaut Christina Koch replied.
The milestone was hit around two days, five hours and 24
minutes after liftoff, according to the NASA official broadcast.
The US space agency's online dashboard showed that the Orion
spacecraft carrying the astronauts is now more than 219,000 kilometres (136,080
miles) from Earth.
"We're halfway there," NASA posted on social
media.
The spacecraft's next milestone will be entering the lunar
sphere of influence, set to take place on day five of the flight, according to
NASA.
The astronauts -- Americans Koch, Victor Glover, Reid
Wiseman and Canadian Jeremy Hansen -- are now on a "free-return"
trajectory, which uses the Moon's gravity to slingshot around it before heading
back towards Earth without propulsion.

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