
NASA has released the first images taken by the Artemis II crew during their historic trip around the far side of the moon.
The four astronauts — NASA commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch and Canadian Space Agency mission specialist Jeremy Hansen — spent Monday’s seven-hour lunar flyby taking photos and making observations from the Orion spacecraft, which they named Integrity.
Among the stunning new images uploaded by NASA on Tuesday was a photo of “Earthset,” which was captured through the Orion capsule’s window at 6:41 p.m. ET, according to NASA.
"A muted blue Earth with bright white clouds sets behind the cratered lunar surface," the photo caption reads. "The dark portion of Earth is experiencing nighttime. On Earth’s day side, swirling clouds are visible over the Australia and Oceania region.”
Visible in the foreground is the moon, with the Ohm crater’s “terraced edges and a flat floor interrupted by central peaks,” per NASA’s description.

The crew also captured “Earthrise,” recreating the iconic photo taken during the Apollo 8 mission in 1968.

Also included in the new batch of images is a view of the solar eclipse that the crew experienced near the end of the flyby.

The astronauts donned eclipse viewers to protect their eyes during the nearly hour-long celestial event. But they still struggled to put into words what they were witnessing.

“Humans probably have not evolved to see what we're seeing," Glover told mission control. "It is truly hard to describe.”

Other photos captured close-up views of the lunar surface, including little-seen craters and basins from the vantage point of the crew, which at one point came within about 4,000 miles of the moon.
During Monday’s flyby, the Artemis II set a new record for the farthest distance from Earth traveled by humans — 252,756 miles, surpassing the previous mark set by Apollo 13 in 1970.



LATEST POSTS
- 1
4 DSLR Cameras for Amateurs in 2024 - 2
7 Straightforward Moves toward Move Information from Your Old Cell phone to Your New One: A Thorough Aide - 3
Shakira's 2026 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' U.S. Tour: How to get tickets, prices, dates and more - 4
Step by step instructions to Deal with Your Time While Chasing after an Internet based Degree - 5
Want to make America healthy again? Stop fueling climate change
Ancient eggshells shed new light on crocodiles that hunted prey from trees
From record warming to rusting rivers, 2025 Arctic Report Card shows a region transforming faster than expected
Go on A Careful spending plan: Modest Objections for Your List of must-dos
IndiGo lands IATA chief Willie Walsh as new CEO
Nature's Best: A Manual for Beautiful Train Rides
FDA adds strongest warning to Sarepta gene therapy linked to 2 patient deaths
From Representative to Business visionary: Private issue Victories
Figure out How to Augment the Advantages of a Web-based Degree
Old photos misrepresented as aftermath of political party supporters' brawl in Bangladesh













