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NASA Unveils 1st Earth Photos From Artemis II: ‘You Look Beautiful.’

The pictures were released on the third day of the first mission since 1972 to send people around the moon.

 

 

The astronauts of Artemis II were 97,843 miles from Earth at the time this article published.

 

As the Artemis II astronauts fly farther from Earth, they’re taking the opportunity to look back home. On Friday morning, NASA shared a partial view of our bright blue planet as captured by Reid Wiseman, the mission’s commander. Earth, swathed in swirling clouds, is shown rising through a window on the Orion capsule in which the crew is to journey around the moon.

Another picture posted by the space agency shows Earth in full, with green streaks of aurora painting parts of its atmosphere.

“You look amazing, you look beautiful,” Victor Glover, the pilot of Artemis II, said in a video call with ABC News on Thursday night.

Mr. Glover, the first Black astronaut to travel to deep space, emphasized the unifying power of seeing Earth from such a distance. “No matter where you are from or what you look like, we’re all one people,” he said.

The entire globe of Earth seen in space.
Credit…Reid Wiseman/NASA, via Associated Press
Three astronauts in zero gravity inside the Orion spacecraft.
A screenshot from a NASA video feed on Friday with Artemis II crew members, from left, Christina Koch, Reid Wiseman and Victor Glover. (Jeremy Hansen, the Canadian Space Agency astronaut, is hidden behind Ms. Koch.)Credit…NASA TV, via Agence France-Presse

The Artemis II crew also includes mission specialists Christina Koch, the first woman to journey around the moon, and Jeremy Hansen, the first Canadian astronaut to make the trip.

On Thursday, after testing out various systems of the Orion spacecraft in Earth orbit, NASA committed the capsule and crew to the trip around the moon with the spacecraft’s final major engine burn.

“With this burn to the moon, we do not leave Earth,” Ms. Koch said shortly before the maneuver. “We choose it.”

It is now the third day of the crew’s 10-day mission. The crew was set to wake up during the early afternoon on Earth and begin the day’s activities, which include an in-space CPR demonstration and a test of emergency communication systems.

On Day 6, the astronauts will loop around the far side of the moon, the first humans to visit — from afar — in more than half a century. On Friday, the crew is to rehearse some of the scientific observations that they will try during that phase of the mission.

Then gravity will swing them back toward home. On the final day of the mission, the astronauts are expected to splash down in the Pacific Ocean.

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Katrina Miller is a science reporter for The Times based in Chicago. She earned a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago.

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