For the first time in over 50 years, human beings have returned to the vicinity of the moon. In the early hours of Monday, 06 April 2026, the four astronauts of NASA’s Artemis II mission officially entered the lunar “sphere of influence”, the gravitational boundary where the moon’s pull finally overtakes that of the Earth.
At 12:37 a.m. EDT, the Orion spacecraft crossed this invisible threshold while travelling at approximately 232,000 miles (373,000 km) from Earth. This milestone marks the midpoint of a 10-day mission that is currently rewriting the record books of human exploration.
The mission is led by a diverse crew representing the “Artemis Generation”:
- Reid Wiseman (Commander): A veteran US Navy Captain.
- Victor Glover (Pilot): An American naval officer, test pilot and NASA astronaut from the class of 2013. Making history as the first person of colour to venture beyond low Earth orbit.
- Christina Koch (Mission Specialist): The first woman to fly to the moon, adding to her record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman.
- Jeremy Hansen (Mission Specialist): The first Canadian to reach lunar space, representing the mission’s international partnership.
By Monday evening, the crew is expected to reach a maximum distance of 252,760 miles (406,773 km) from Earth. This will officially surpass the record set by the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission in 1970, making Wiseman, Glover, Koch, and Hansen the farthest-flying humans in history.
The Flight Path:
Closest Approach: Orion will “slingshot” around the lunar far side at an altitude of roughly 4,000 miles (6,400 km).
The View: Unlike the Apollo astronauts who flew closer (around 70 miles), this higher altitude allows the Artemis crew to see the complete spherical surface of the moon, including both poles, with the naked eye.
The “Bullseye”: On Sunday, the crew captured a stunning image of the Orientale Basin, a massive crater resembling a bullseye that has never before been seen in its entirety by human eyes.
While the flyby is a test of Orion’s deep-space life-support systems, the crew is not just along for the ride. They are currently working in shifts to complete 10 science objectives and observe 35 different lunar targets.
Earlier today, the crew conducted “survival suit” tests, simulating rapid emergency suiting in zero gravity to ensure the Orion Crew Survival System is ready for the upcoming Artemis III lunar landing, currently targeted for 2028.
The Artemis II mission appears more than a technical feat; a shift in the global narrative of who belongs in space, perhaps.
Including the first woman, the first person of colour, and the first international partner on a lunar mission, may indicate that NASA is finally aligning the gains of space exploration with the diversity of the planet it left behind.
As Victor Glover shared in a heartfelt message from the cabin on Easter Sunday, this journey is about carrying the hopes of billions.
For the Global South, this mission provides a blueprint: when we bridge the gaps in representation, the gains belong to all of humanity.

























































































