World & U.S. News

Artemis II: America Returns to Deep Space and Nails the Landing

The Artemis II mission has just delivered a moment that will likely be remembered for decades. After a 10 day journey around the Moon, four astronauts safely returned to Earth in a flawless splashdown that confirmed something many had been waiting to see again. The United States is back in the business of sending humans into deep space.

As NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said moments after landing, “We are back in the business of sending astronauts to the moon.”

Artemis II was the first crewed mission of NASA’s modern lunar program. Unlike earlier test flights, this mission sent humans beyond low Earth orbit and around the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era.

Launched on April 1, the mission carried four astronauts on a free return trajectory that looped around the Moon and brought them back to Earth without landing. Over the course of the mission, the crew traveled nearly 700,000 miles, testing critical systems needed for future lunar landings.

The mission validated life support systems, navigation, propulsion, and deep space operations. It also gave scientists valuable human observations of the lunar surface that robotic systems alone cannot provide.

In simple terms, Artemis II proved that NASA can safely send people to the Moon and bring them home again.

A 10 Day Mission That Came Down to 34 Minutes

While the mission lasted 10 days, everything came down to the final 34 minutes of reentry.

As the Orion capsule reentered Earth’s atmosphere, it was traveling at speeds approaching 25,000 miles per hour. Temperatures climbed to around 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit as the heat shield endured one of its toughest tests.

For six minutes, the spacecraft disappeared into a communications blackout as plasma formed around it. Then, at 22,000 feet, parachutes deployed. Three massive main chutes slowed the capsule to just 19 miles per hour before it touched down in the Pacific Ocean.

The result was what NASA described as a “perfect bulls eye splashdown.”

Commander Reid Wiseman summed it up simply: “What a journey.”

All four astronauts were reported safe and in good condition.

Why This Mission Matters

Artemis II was not about landing on the Moon. It was about proving that every critical system works under real conditions with humans onboard.

This mission demonstrated that NASA can handle deep space navigation, long duration human flight, and the extreme conditions of lunar return. It also validated adjustments made after concerns with the Artemis I heat shield.

Perhaps most importantly, it showed that the United States can still execute complex human spaceflight missions at the highest level.

This is the foundation everything else depends on.

Upcoming Artemis Schedule

The Artemis program is moving quickly now, with a clear sequence ahead.

Artemis III is scheduled for 2027 and will focus on testing docking systems between Orion and a lunar lander in Earth orbit.

The first actual lunar landings are now planned for Artemis IV and Artemis V, both targeted for 2028.

Artemis V is expected to begin laying the groundwork for a permanent human presence on the Moon.

As Isaacman put it, “This is just the beginning… sending missions to the moon until we land on it in 2028 and start building our base.”

The Goal: A Permanent Base on the Moon

The long term objective of Artemis is not just exploration. It is infrastructure.

NASA is planning to establish a sustained human presence on the Moon, most likely near the lunar south pole. This region is considered the most strategic location for a base.

The reason comes down to two key advantages.

First, there is evidence of water ice trapped in permanently shadowed craters. This ice could be used for drinking water, oxygen, and even rocket fuel.

Second, nearby elevated areas receive extended periods of sunlight, making them ideal for solar power generation.

This combination of resources makes the south pole the most viable location for long term operations.

How Much Does Artemis Cost

The Artemis program is one of the most ambitious space efforts in history, and it comes with a significant price tag. While exact totals continue to evolve, the program has already cost tens of billions of dollars, and long term projections suggest total costs could exceed $90 billion as missions continue and infrastructure is built.

At the same time, NASA is facing budget pressure. A proposed 23 percent cut to NASA’s funding, equal to $5.6 billion, has added uncertainty to long term planning.

If Artemis succeeds, it changes everything about human spaceflight.

A permanent lunar presence would allow for continuous scientific research, resource extraction, and technology development in a low gravity environment.

More importantly, it becomes a stepping stone to Mars.

The Moon provides a place to test life support systems, radiation protection, and long duration human operations before committing to the much more difficult journey to the Red Planet.

In many ways, Artemis is less about the Moon itself and more about preparing for what comes next.

The Bottom Line

Artemis II proved that the United States can once again send humans into deep space and bring them home safely.

It validated the systems needed for future lunar landings. It set the stage for missions in 2027 and 2028. And it moved NASA one step closer to building a permanent base on the Moon.

After decades of waiting, the next era of human space exploration has begun.

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World & U.S. News
5 Comments on this post.
  • NobodySAIDboo
    11 April 2026 at 9:30 am
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    TOTAL BULLLL SHIIIIT!!! NO LANDING of any kind same old 1960s SHIT ,shit actors and filthy jew cartoons!

    • Finance and Money
      11 April 2026 at 1:23 pm
      Leave a Reply

      Start planning your lunar vacation, tickets available for May, 2032!

      • Jeff
        11 April 2026 at 6:59 pm
        Leave a Reply

        I have tickets. Would you like to purchase?

        • Finance and Money
          12 April 2026 at 1:10 pm
          Leave a Reply

          Yes, I will send you the money now and you can send me the tickets when the flight is scheduled, OK??

  • Sean
    11 April 2026 at 6:01 pm
    Leave a Reply

    Yet another fake space mission. It’s hard to believe that people still fall for this nonsense. In back to back photos from 1969 the other from today the cloud patterns haven’t moved at all in almost sixty years.

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