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Updated - April 04, 2026 at 07:49 AM.
| Cape Canaveral (US)

A view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. The image features two auroras (top right and bottom left) and zodiacal light (bottom right) is visible as the Earth eclipses the Sun. | Photo Credit: NASA
The Artemis II astronauts have captured our blue planet's brilliant beauty as they zoom ever closer to the moon.
NASA released the crew's first downlinked images Friday, 1 1/2 days into the first astronaut moonshot in more than half a century.
The first photo taken by commander Reid Wiseman shows a curved slice of Earth in one of the capsule's windows. The second shows the entire globe with the oceans topped by swirling white tendrils of clouds.
As of midmorning Friday, Wiseman and his crew were 90,000 miles (145,000 kilometres) from Earth and were quickly gaining on the moon with another 168,000 miles (270,000 kilometres) to go. They should reach their destination on Monday.
The three Americans and one Canadian will swing around the moon in their Orion capsule, hang a U-turn and then head straight back home without stopping. They fired Orion's main engine Thursday night that set them on their course.
They're the first lunar travellers since Apollo 17 in 1972.
Published on April 4, 2026
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