
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
We now know how far the Artemis 2 astronauts will get from Earth — and that distance will be unprecedented.
The Artemis 2 crew — NASA's Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen — will travel a maximum of 252,757 miles (406,773 kilometers) from their home planet, NASA announced today (April 3).
The current human-distance record, set in April 1970 by the three astronauts of NASA's Apollo 13 mission, is 248,655 miles (400,171 km).
Artemis 2 will set the new mark on Monday (April 6), when its Orion capsule loops around the far side of the moon and starts heading back to Earth.
The mission was always expected to break Apollo 13's record. But the new distance estimate — which was revealed by Judd Freiling, the Artemis 2 ascent flight director, during a press briefing this afternoon — carries more weight than previous ones did.
That's because it was calculated after Orion's translunar injection (TLI) burn, a nearly six-minute-long maneuver that sent the capsule out of Earth orbit and on its way to the moon. Orion aced the TLI on Thursday evening (April 2), charting the course for the rest of the mission — and giving NASA some real numbers to crunch.
"The translunar injection burn is the last major engine firing of the mission," NASA officials wrote in the Artemis 2 press kit.
"It propels Orion on a path toward the moon and sets it on the free-return trajectory that will ultimately bring crew back to Earth for splashdown," they added. "Though only two days into the mission, it essentially doubles as Orion's deorbit burn as well."
As those words indicate, Artemis 2 will not land on the moon, or even enter lunar orbit. It was designed from the start as a flyby mission, which aims to show that Orion is capable of carrying astronauts to and from the moon. If all goes to plan, more ambitious Artemis flights will follow, including the program's first crewed lunar landing with Artemis 4 in late 2028.
Apollo 13, by contrast, was supposed to touch down on the moon. However, an oxygen-tank explosion 56 hours after launch scotched those plans and put the mission into survival mode.
And survive it did, thanks to the ingenuity and perseverance of the Apollo 13 astronauts — commander Jim Lovell, lunar module pilot Fred Haise and command module pilot Jack Swigert — and the folks in Mission Control. Lovell, Haise and Swigert made it back to Earth safely after swinging around the moon, etching their names into the history books for multiple reasons.
latest_posts
- 1
$2,000 tariff rebate checks? 50-year mortgages? Making sense of Trump's new 'affordability' proposals. - 2
Woman leaves bachelorette trip after trusting her gut about sketchy men partying it up with friends - 3
Mojtaba Khamenei unconscious in Qom, not actually running Iran - 4
Violence 'never part' of break-in plan, court told - 5
Becoming amazing at Arranging Pay Raises
Record-breaking 'space laser' erupts from merging galaxies 8 billion light-years away
L.A.'s most famous midcentury home, the Stahl House, is on the market for the 1st time, at $11K per square foot: See inside
An Extended period of Voyaging Carefully: the World with Reason
After toilet and email issues, Artemis II astronauts fire engine to head for the moon
UN torture cm'tee report flags Israel for allegedly mistreating journalists, detainees, ex-MAG
Creative Do-It-Yourself Ventures for Each Expertise Level
People who talk with their hands seem more clear and persuasive – new research
Rocket shines under the northern lights | Space photo of the day for March 25, 2026
Single women risk rape and exploitation in search for better life in Europe













