Artemis II astronauts get closer to moon
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The San Diego Air & Space Museum is hosting a watch party for the Artemis II splashdown off the coast, featuring NASA experts and fun activities.
The Artemis II crew is set to make history as they travel around the far side of the moon, ending with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego on April 10. When to watch.
The tracker, officially referred to as the "Artemis Real-time Orbit Website" — AROW — allows users to not only see where the Orion spacecraft is and how fast it's traveling, but to see in miles how far it is from both the Earth and the moon, according to NASA.
NASA says Artemis II is on track as astronauts head toward a lunar flyby. After minor issues, the mission will end with a Navy-led splashdown recovery off San Diego.
For one, the Triage’s blunt tip prevents accidental cuts in first responder-type situations (or in NASA’s case a splashdown gone awry).
The astronaut who prompted NASA's first medical evacuation earlier this year says doctors still don't know why he suddenly fell sick at the International Space Station.