
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
The Artemis 2 astronauts have shared a view that the billions of us stuck on Earth will never get firsthand: a gorgeous shot of our home planet shining like a sapphire in the blackness of space.
What is it?
This photo shows Earth as seen from Artemis 2's Orion spacecraft, which on Thursday evening (April 2) aced a crucial engine burn that took it out of Earth orbit and toward the moon.
The Artemis 2 astronauts — NASA's Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, and the Canadian Space Agency's Jeremy Hansen — have since been watching Earth recede into the distance, and NASA shared one of their photos today (April 3) on the social media site X.
"We see our home planet as a whole, lit up in spectacular blues and browns. A green aurora even lights up the atmosphere. That's us, together, watching as our astronauts make their journey to the moon," NASA officials wrote in the X post.
Why is it amazing?
The photo by itself is amazing enough, showing our planet as it truly is — a shimmering, fragile outpost of life in a vast and dark cosmos. But the connection to Artemis 2 makes it even more special.
Artemis 2 is the first crewed moon mission since Apollo 17 back in 1972. If all goes to plan, Wiseman, Glover, Koch and Hansen will loop around the moon on Day 6 of the mission, which lifted off on April 1. They'll come back to Earth for a splashdown on Day 10.
Artemis 2 won't land on the moon or even enter lunar orbit. It's designed to pave the way for those milestones, and in fact even more ambitious ones: NASA's Artemis program aims to build a base near the lunar south pole in the early 2030s.
Keep tabs on the mission's latest developments with our Artemis 2 live updates page.
latest_posts
- 1
'Everyone in this prison has had family killed or shot' - 2
Fossils from China show complex life evolved millions of years earlier than once thought - 3
SpaceX shatters its rocket launch record yet again — 165 orbital flights in 2025 - 4
China bans storing cremated remains in empty 'bone ash apartments' - 5
Jury says Johnson & Johnson owes $40 million to 2 cancer patients who used talcum powders
Met Gala 2026 will celebrate fashion as an 'embodied art form': A guide to the theme, dress code, cochairs and hosting committee of the starry event
Struggling to keep your New Year's resolutions? Here's how to keep yourself on track
Tracking down the Right Equilibrium: Charges versus Personal Costs in Senior Protection.
Best Getaway destination: Ocean side, Mountain, or City
The Best Competitors of the 21st Hundred years
A 'Stranger Things' documentary covering the final season is on its way: Watch the trailer
Israel strikes south Lebanon after first direct talks in decades
Flu cases are rising with a strain that makes older people sicker
HGV driver recruited others to smuggle migrants













