Earth, It is so
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Artemis II, moon
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NASA's Artemis II crew, travelling farther from Earth than any humans before them, flew past the moon Monday. Their mission serves as a stepping stone for a planned 2028 landing on the lunar surface.
As they traveled back toward Earth following a solar eclipse and a communications blackout, President Trump called the space capsule to praise the four astronauts on their success.
NASA's Artemis II crew left Earth orbit Thursday evening en route for the moon, marking a milestone not reached in more than 50 years.
Humanity on Monday traveled the farthest ever into space, breaking the record set more than 50 years ago by Apollo 13. Artemis II’s four astronauts zoomed past Apollo 13’s 248,655-mile mark around 1:56 p.
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