The sky’s the limit to their space secrets.
The Artemis II crew says it is returning from man’s farthest galactic journey with cosmically cool “stories” and dazzling information that’s yet to be revealed.
“There’s so much data that you’ve seen already, but all the good stuff is coming back with us,” pilot astronaut Victor Glover said from outerspace this week. “There’s so many more pictures, so many more stories, and, gosh, I haven’t even begun to process what we’ve been through.
Artemis II astronaut Christina Koch gazes at Earth from the crew’s capsule the day after blast-off. NASA/AFP via Getty Images“We have to get back,” he said, according to NPR.
To return safely from its historic 10-day moon mission, the crew must re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere at a precise angle — while taking a daring plunge through ultra-hot temperatures at a mind-bending speed of nearly 25,000 mph.
“Let’s not beat around the bush,” said Jeff Radigan, Artemis II’s lead flight director. “We have to hit that angle correctly. Otherwise, we’re not going to have a successful reentry.”
The four crew members are scheduled to splash down in the Pacific Ocean on Friday night. via REUTERSThe space capsule will enter the atmosphere near Hawaii at 7:53 p.m. ET, then splashdown into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego if all goes to plan.
The re-entry is thought to be the most dangerous part of the Artemis II’s mission as the 330-cubic-foot capsule is scorched by heat half as hot as the sun’s surface.
The four astronauts on board launched from the Kennedy Space Center on April 1 in a test flight to orbit the moon — marking humankind’s first return to deep space since 1972.
They later set the record for the farthest distance humans have ever traveled into space at roughly 252,756 miles, beating the previous one set by the Apollo 13 in 1970.

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