Artemis II: Stunning photos of the Moon from historic fly-by, astronauts left in awe

SEE THE PICS: During their historic lunar flyby, the astronauts of the NASA mission Artemis II were working hard to identify and photograph features on the far side of the moon.

Katrina Miller
The New York Times
The Artemis II crew has broken the Apollo 13 record set in 1970, travelling further from Earth than any other humans at 406,733 kilometres during their lunar flyby mission.

HOUSTON — During their historic lunar flyby Monday, the astronauts of the NASA mission Artemis II were working hard to identify and photograph features on the far side of the moon.

Their accounts went beyond the plain and technical language often associated with science. Instead, they were full of wonder, excitement and reflection.

“I just had an overwhelming sense of being moved by looking at the moon,” Christina Koch, a mission specialist aboard the spacecraft, which the astronauts named Integrity, reported to mission control.

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“The moon really is its own unique body in the universe,” Koch, a NASA astronaut, added. “It’s not just a poster in the sky that goes by — it’s a real place.”

Science is often viewed as colorless and objective, to be conducted with little emotion or expression. But as the Artemis II crew members painted lunar hills, valleys and plains in the minds of listeners back home, they provided a model for a poignant approach to scientific inquiry.

The awe emerged over the weekend as they approached the moon.

A photo provided by NASA shows a solar eclipse, captured by the Artemis II crew from the Orion Integrity spacecraf.
A photo provided by NASA shows a solar eclipse, captured by the Artemis II crew from the Orion Integrity spacecraf. Credit: NASA/NYT
A photo provided by NASA shows an Earthset, captured by the Artemis II crew.
A photo provided by NASA shows an Earthset, captured by the Artemis II crew. Credit: NASA/NYT

Reid Wiseman of NASA, the mission’s commander, eagerly noted impact craters and a swirl on the lunar surface.

Reid Wiseman, commander of the Artemis II mission, peering through a window of the Orion Integrity spacecraft during the flyby around the far side of the Moon.
Reid Wiseman, commander of the Artemis II mission, peering through a window of the Orion Integrity spacecraft during the flyby around the far side of the Moon. Credit: NASA/NYT

“It’s just everything from the training, but in three dimensions and absolutely unbelievable,” he said. “This is incredible.”

Jacki Mahaffey, a NASA officer in mission control, laughed in response. “Copy, moon joy,” she said.

A photo provided by NASA shows a solar eclipse, captured by the Artemis II crew from the Orion Integrity.
A photo provided by NASA shows a solar eclipse, captured by the Artemis II crew from the Orion Integrity. Credit: NASA/NYT

As the lunar surface grew closer, that moon joy intensified.

Jeremy Hansen, a mission specialist from the Canadian Space Agency, described the view from the spacecraft as mind-blowing.

Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen, a member of the Artemis II crew, looking back at the Earth from a window through a window of the Orion Integrity spacecraft.
Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen, a member of the Artemis II crew, looking back at the Earth from a window through a window of the Orion Integrity spacecraft. Credit: NASA/NYT

Victor Glover, the pilot, was particularly enthralled by the magic of the moon’s terminator line, which separates its sunlit side from the part shrouded in darkness. He noted islands of light and valleys of black holes along the divider.

“You’d fall straight to the center of the moon if you stepped in some of those,” he said.

The crew of the Artemis II mission wearing eclipse viewers during their flyby of the far side of the Moon.
The crew of the Artemis II mission wearing eclipse viewers during their flyby of the far side of the Moon. Credit: NASA/NYT

Glover was also struck by how sharp the features of the moon looked through his camera lens.

“It was hard to speak,” he told mission control during the flyby. In between more technical descriptions of the moon, he described where his imagination had gone.

“I was walking around down there on the surface, climbing and off-roading on that amazing terrain,” he said.

Down in Houston, mission control cheered. “We just all went on that moonwalk with you,” said Kelsey Young, a lunar expert who is leading the scientific part of the Artemis II mission.

Mission Control Center during the Artemis II mission at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.
Mission Control Center during the Artemis II mission at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Credit: CASSANDRA KLOS/NYT

During a news conference Saturday, Young explained that the astronauts underwent extensive training to learn how to give scientific descriptions of the moon, studying everything from flash cards in class to the moonlike terrain of Iceland.

The sentiment in their responses, however, felt unrehearsed. And rather than discourage the emotion, Young seemed to feel it with them.

That expressiveness came to a height while the crew watched a solar eclipse from space during the final part of their lunar flyby. The sun slipped behind the moon, inducing a halo of light around the lunar rim, while its face shone faintly, lit by the glow from Earth.

“After all of the amazing sights that we saw earlier, we just went sci-fi,” Glover said. “You can actually see a majority of the moon. It is the strangest-looking thing that you can see so much on the surface.”

The crew described a field of stars surrounding a darkened moon, and identified Mars from its reddish hue as well as an orangy Saturn. Earth also glimmered bright.

A photo provided by NASA shows a view of the Vavilov Crater, centre, and the older and larger Hertzsprung Basin, right, on the far side of the Moon.
A photo provided by NASA shows a view of the Vavilov Crater, centre, and the older and larger Hertzsprung Basin, right, on the far side of the Moon. Credit: NASA/NYT

Wiseman and Hansen reported flashes of light on the lunar surface — meteor strikes in real time — which made Young rise from her seat.

As the sun emerged on the other side of the moon, the astronauts likened the growing spot of light on the lunar horizon to a flame, and the wispy streams of its outer atmosphere to baby hair.

After a while, words just couldn’t suffice.

The SLS rocket takes off to begin the Artemis II mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.
The SLS rocket takes off to begin the Artemis II mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Credit: KENNY HOLSTON/NYT

“No matter how long we look at this, our brains are not processing,” said Wiseman, who jokingly requested that mission control send him a list of new words to expand his vocabulary.

“There’s no adjectives,” he added. “I’m going to need to invent new ones. There’s absolutely no words to describe what we are looking at out this window.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2026 The New York Times Company

Originally published on The New York Times

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