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Nasa Artemis II launch: A complete guide on how the spaceflight will proceed

FP Explainers April 1, 2026, 06:33:00 IST

All eyes are on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (Nasa) Artemis II moon mission set to launch today (April 1). The four-member crew will undertake a 10-day voyage, orbit the Moon, and then touch down in the Pacific. Here’s a complete guide on how the mission will unfold

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People look at Nasa's next-generation moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion crew capsule, on Pad 39B ahead of the Artemis II mission launch at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. File image/Reuters
People look at Nasa's next-generation moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion crew capsule, on Pad 39B ahead of the Artemis II mission launch at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. File image/Reuters

It’s a big day for space. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) is launching its Artemis II Moon Mission today (April 1), and all eyes are on that. A moon mission, sending a four-member crew on a high-speed journey around the moon and back, is expected to last about 10 days.

Marking Nasa’s first crewed mission towards the Moon in over five decades, Artemis II is designed to prepare the way for future missions that aim to send astronauts to the lunar surface later this decade.

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Nasa previously launched the unmanned Artemis I Moon mission in 2022. Here’s a deep dive into a day-by-day outline of how the flight is expected to proceed.

Launch day

Artemis II is scheduled to lift off from Nasa’s Kennedy Space Centre in Florida ​aboard the Space Launch System, the most powerful rocket the agency has ever flown. Nasa ​ has said the launch window opens on April 1, with multiple backup opportunities available over the following days, depending on weather, technical readiness, and range availability.

After launch, the ​Orion crew capsule will separate from the rocket’s upper stage and enter a highly elliptical orbit around ​Earth.

Days 1–2: Earth orbit checkouts

The crew will spend the first one to two days in high Earth orbit conducting extensive systems checks. These include testing Orion’s life-support, propulsion, navigation and communications systems to ensure the spacecraft is ​ready to head into deep space.

Translunar injection

Once checkouts are complete, Orion’s propulsion system will perform ​a critical engine burn known as translunar injection, sending the spacecraft out of Earth orbit and onto a trajectory ‌ toward ⁠the moon .

Days 3–4: Coast to the Moon

During the several-day transit to the moon, astronauts will continue monitoring spacecraft systems en route to operating farther from Earth than any previous human spaceflight. Mission controllers will track communications and navigation performance as Orion travels deep into space.

Moon flyby

Orion will pass ​behind the Moon on a “free-return” ​trajectory, a path that ⁠naturally swings the spacecraft back toward Earth without requiring additional propulsion. The spacecraft will reach its greatest distance from Earth during this phase.

Days ​5–8: Return to Earth

After the lunar flyby, the crew will spend several days ​heading home ⁠while conducting additional deep-space tests, including evaluations of power systems, thermal controls and crew operations far beyond low Earth orbit.

Re-entry and splashdown

As Orion approaches Earth, it will separate key components before plunging into the ⁠atmosphere ​at speeds of about 25,000 miles per hour (40,233 kph). Testing ​the capsule’s heat shield during high-energy re-entry is one of the mission’s primary objectives.

The spacecraft is expected to splash down ​in the Pacific Ocean, where recovery teams will retrieve the crew.

With inputs from agencies

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