More than half a century after humanity last journeyed toward the Moon, NASA is preparing to launch its first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years – and the world is watching it unfold live.
The Artemis II mission will not land on the Moon. Instead, over a 10-day flight, astronauts will travel farther from Earth than any humans before, executing a full lunar flyby before returning home.
At the heart of the mission is the Orion spacecraft, a compact capsule roughly the size of a minibus – engineered to carry humans safely into deep space and back.
Crew on board
•Reid Wiseman (Commander) •Christina Koch
•Victor Glover
•Jeremy Hansen
⏱ Launch timing
•Launch window opens: 23:20 BST (18:20 local time)
•Location: Kennedy Space Center 🌦 Weather outlook (critical factor)
Weather remains a potential wildcard. Current forecasts over Florida’s Space Coast suggest:
•Partly cloudy skies
•Moderate winds
•A 30–40% chance of scattered showers or thunderstorms
Launch controllers will be closely monitoring conditions, as lightning risk and upper-level winds could trigger a delay – a familiar challenge for missions out of Cape Canaveral.
Bottom line:
This isn’t just another launch. Artemis II marks the first human step back toward the Moon since Apollo – a dress rehearsal for landing astronauts on the lunar surface again.