NASA Artemis 2 astronauts to make historic moon flyby today. Here’s what to expect hour by hour (timeline)

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HOUSTON — NASA’s first astronaut close encounter with the moon in over 50 years will become a reality today (April 6), and you’ll be able to follow it live online. But you will need to know when to tune in and for how long, and for that, we’ve got you covered.

This photo shows the Orion spacecraft with the moon in the distance, as captured by a camera on the tip of one of its solar array wings.

A view of the Artemis 2 Orion spacecraft Integrity with the moon in the background during the outbound flight for a lunar flyby. (Image credit: NASA)

Wiseman and his Artemis 2 crewmates — pilot Victor Glover and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen — will be the first humans to see the moon up close since NASA’s Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

They are the first astronauts to visit the moon in the 21st century, and they will see parts of the moon that NASA’s Apollo astronauts were never able to, like the poles of the far side. They’ll also see a rare solar eclipse from beyond the moon.

To help you know what to expect, here’s a timeline of NASA’s Artemis 2 moon flyby day, hour by hour.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Artemis 2 moon flyby timeline

Time (in EDT/GMT)

Event

What to know

9:50 a.m. EDT / 1350 GMT

Artemis 2 crew wakes up

This begins Flight Day 6. Flyby day. NASA will play the crew a song.

1 p.m. EDT / 1700 GMT

NASA’s main livestream begins

This is a special broadcast. The 24/7 feed will transition to this.

1:56 p.m. EDT / 1756 GMT

Artemis 2 surpasses Apollo 13 distance record

The Orion ship will fly farther than Apollo 13, going beyond 248,655 miles from Earth.

2:10 p.m. EDT / 1810 GMT

Artemis 2 crew comments on beating Apollo 13 record

The Artemis 2 crew will comment on their new record, but we’ll get audio only.

2:15 p.m. EDT / 1815 GMT

Orion cabin configured for flyby

The astronauts will darken the cabin lights and prep cameras and other gear.

2:45 p.m. EDT / 1845 GMT

Seven-hour moon flyby observation period begins

The Artemis 2 crew will observe both near and far sides of the moon. The main phase lasts five hours.

4:35 p.m. EDT / 2035 GMT

Interior views of Orion

NASA will show inside views of Orion during the flyby.

Ongoing.

Observations continue.

The crew has 35 targets for 10 science objectives. They may see the Apollo 14 and Apollo 12 landing sites.

6:47 p.m. EDT / 2247 GMT

Loss of signal

NASA will temporarily lose contact with Artemis 2. It should last 40 minutes.

7:02 p.m. EDT / 2307 GMT

Artemis 2 closest to moon

Orion will be about 4,070 miles above the moon at closest approach.

7:05 p.m. EDT / 2305 GMT

Artemis 2 reaches its farthest point from Earth

Orion will be at its farthest from Earth, at about 252,760 miles away.

7:27 p.m. EDT / 2327 GMT

Reacquisition of signal

Mission Control should reacquire signal with Artemis 2.

8:35 p.m. EDT / 0035 GMT on April 7

Artemis 2 sees solar eclipse

The astronauts will see the moon block the sun in a total solar eclipse. It will last 53 minutes.

9:20 p.m. / 0120 GMT on April 7

Artemis 2 lunar flyby observation period ends

The flyby observing period ends. The crew begins sending some imagery to Earth.

A screenshot of the Lunar Targeting Plan application that guides the Artemis II astronauts through their lunar science observations. This custom software was built by the crew lunar observations team, a subset of the Artemis II lunar science team.

A screenshot of the Lunar Targeting Plan application that guides the Artemis 2 astronauts through their lunar science observations. This custom software was built by the crew lunar observations team, a subset of the Artemis 2 lunar science team. (Image credit: NASA)

Kelsey Young, Artemis 2 lunar science lead, said NASA has 10 science objectives and 35 different targets for the Artemis 2 crew to aim for during the flyby.

The astronauts will work in two-person shifts over five hours of the main flyby period. They’ll use a tablet-based Lunar Targeting Plan app to record voice observations of their targets while also taking potentially thousands of photos of moon craters, plains and mountains.

“We’ve got a jam-packed plan for them tomorrow, and it ultimately all traces down to our objectives,” Young said.

The astronauts have had several opportunities to observe the moon as they closed in on their lunar flyby. Based on their descriptions of the moon, NASA’s lunar science team can’t wait to hear the Artemis 2 crew’s observations from today’s flyby.

“They crushed it,” said Jennifer Hellmann, an Artemis 2 science team lead from NASA’s Ames Research Center in California. “We were excited for the flyby before, don’t get me wrong. But we are, like, super, super excited now because they’re so good! They’re so well trained; they know what they’re talking about.”

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