Gizmodo will be covering NASA's Artemis 2 mission all the way through to splashdown. Follow along with us here.
Photos of Earth taken by the Artemis 2 astronauts reveal their perspective as they zoom farther away from our home planet than any have gone before.
Why go to the Moon when there are so many problems to fix here on Earth? Artemis 2 mission pilot Victor Glover explained Thursday from cislunar space.
The Orion spacecraft has successfully completed the translunar injection burn and departed low-Earth orbit.
Four astronauts blasted off on a journey to the Moon on Wednesday. Here are some cool launch-day details you may not have picked up on.
NASA's Space Launch System rocket, with the Orion spacecraft atop, launched at 6:35 p.m. ET on Wednesday, kicking off the first mission to send astronauts to the Moon in over 50 years.
The agency has a lot riding on this historic mission—literally and figuratively. Let’s hope it doesn’t end in catastrophe.
You don’t want to miss this historic moment.
Sometimes, the best way to understand a mission is to know the numbers.Â
An X-class solar flare and coronal mass ejection threaten to interfere with the most anticipated space launch in over 50 years.
During the record-long speech, the President made no mention of NASA's most important crewed mission since the Apollo era, even though the astronauts were in the audience.
With a wet dress rehearsal successfully concluded, the Artemis 2 mission could launch in a matter of weeks.
“There is still a great deal of work ahead to prepare for this historic mission.”
The agency recently delayed the Artemis 2 mission due to a liquid hydrogen leak that has plagued the SLS rocket.
Why is this still a problem?
The Artemis 2 astronauts will venture deeper into space than any human has gone before. That presents some seriously exciting research opportunities.
A hydrogen leak during the wet dress rehearsal for Artemis 2 has forced NASA to forego the February launch window and work toward March instead.
Artemis 2 could launch as early as this coming weekend. If it does, the 10-day mission will have to compete with the Olympics and Super Bowl for media attention.
The agency has bumped up the wet dress rehearsal to increase its chances of launching within the February window, but could an Arctic blast interfere?
NASA’s Artemis 2 mission is no mere test flight. The crew will partake in some seriously mind-blowing science during their 10-day trip around the Moon.