The four NASA astronauts making their way as a part of the historic Artemis II moon mission have given their first interview from the spacecraft.
Astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen revealed incredible details about their lives on Orion.
The team discussed how they sleep in space, the shocking twist on launch day, and the spectacular moment that made them pause amid their race to the moon.
Speaking to ABC, Wiseman explained the crew had been surviving on just two short naps, joking that 'sleeping in space is a comical thing.'
'Christina has been sleeping heads down in the middle of the vehicle, kind of like a bat suspended from our docking tunnel,' Wiseman said.
'Victor has a nice little nook wedged in there. And then Jeremy has been stretched out on seat one, and I’ve been sleeping under the displays, just in case anything goes wrong,' he added.
The team revealed that they were absolutely stunned by how smoothly launch day went. As the countdown neared to its final seconds before takeoff, the SLS rocket was fired on the first attempt.
'We like to say that we’re prepared without having an expectation — but, in the back of your mind, you kind of hope you launch,' Glover told Fox News.
'And then when we got really close, it was like, "Wait, we’re getting ready to go to space?"'
Glover recalled the surge of exhilaration he felt when he realized the launch had succeeded.
'It was a ride where you're trying to be professional, but the kid inside you wants to break out and just hoot and holler,' he quipped.
A breathtaking moment of the spacecraft reorienting left the team frozen mid-mission on their race to the moon.
'There was a moment about an hour ago where Mission Control Houston reoriented our spacecraft as the sun was setting behind the earth,' Wiseman said.
'And I don’t know what we all expected to see at that moment, but you could see the entire globe, from pole to pole.
'You could see Africa, Europe, and if you looked really close, you could see the northern lights. It was the most spectacular moment, and it paused all four of us in our tracks,' he gushed.
The team set off on Wednesday, marking humanity's first mission to reach the moon since 1972.
This monumental journey is expected to travel a maximum distance from Earth of 252,799 miles, crushing the Apollo 13 record by 4,144 miles.
'We are not necessarily a crew that lives on superlatives, but this is a milestone that's important,' Koch said when asked how the team felt about becoming the first humans to travel this far into space.
'We're here to build a legacy for the future,' she added, praising not only her crew but the entire NASA team that helped make their journey possible
The astronauts gave a warm shout out to their friends and families, thanking them for their love and support in this career milestone.
'Living in Orion isn't the same as being home with our families,' Koch said, adding that the gang is trying to make their capsule 'feel at home.'
Wiseman called the mission 'unbelievable,' almost unable to wrap his mind around the accomplishment.
'This is unbelievable, that we can put our minds to something and pull it off. This is an unbelievable technical accomplishment,' he said.
The burn completed just before 8pm lasted just under six minutes and sends the crew into free-return trajectory, which relies on the Earth and the moon's gravity guiding the ship around the moon and back to Earth.
'Nominal translunar injection burn complete. The Artemis II crew is officially on the way to the Moon,' NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman wrote on X .
'America is back in the business of sending astronauts to the Moon. This time, farther than ever before.'
After it was completed, Hansen shared a hopeful message from space.
'Humanity has once again shown what we are capable of, and it’s your hopes for the future that carry us now on this journey around the moon,' he told mission control, giving thanks to everyone supporting the mission from back on Earth.
Hours before the burn, NASA's chief exploration scientist Jake Bleacher said once that milestone was cleared 'people both up on the Orion and here on Earth [will] breathe a little easier.'
According to NASA, the burn used the orbital maneuvering system engine to provide around 6,000 pounds of thrust, which is enough to accelerate a car from 0 to 60 mph in 2.7 seconds.
'Meanwhile, back at Kennedy Space Center, the teams are out at the pad getting ready for what comes next. We are going to get into a rhythm of launching Moon rockets around here,' Isaacman said on X.
As Artemis II left the Earth's surface on Wednesday, passengers on a Southwest Airlines flight captured breathtaking footage of the lunar mission launch as it happened.
Chris Pappas was among travelers who spotted the rocket as it launched while he peered out of the window and captured the scene on video.
The footage captured the clear blue skies, with only the plane's wing in view until a line of smoke was seen trailing behind the flaming rocket in the distance.
Within seconds, the rocket had shot well beyond the plane's view and disappeared into the sky above - leaving only the trail of smoke in the air behind it.
'Most insane experience,' Pappas wrote on Instagram Threads. '[Southwest Airlines] pilots understood the assignment.'
The video garnered over 65,000 likes, with users astonished at the incredible view.
'I would be sobbing because this timing is unreal,' one user commented.
Another user in awe of the footage wrote: 'That is the best perspective ever. You actually see how f***ing fast it goes up. The perspective scale is not understood seeing it either live on TV or on the ground. Seeing it from the "side" like this, though... amazing video. So lucky.'
'Oh my gosh, that is AMAAAAZING. What an incredible experience, I didn't even imagine a plane would be flying around that area at all, but I guess you're actually so far away,' a third comment said.
'When I was watching the launch earlier, I was already so, so, so excited to see one of these. I’m so jealous. This is an incredible video and thank you for sharing.'
Other users were amazed that flights were able to share airspace during the historic moment.
'Why were you all flying so close to the launch? Very cool view but seems a little close for comfort,' one wrote.
'I’m shocked that an aircraft was allowed into that airspace,' another said, while many other users pointed out that the launch was seen as far as 100 miles away.
'That isn't nearly as close as it seems. A launch can be seen from a long way away,' one pointed out. 'My son sent pictures of the launch from the Air Force base in Tampa Bay, over 100 miles away and from the ground.'
Artemis II took off in a blaze of glory on its mission to the moon from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday.
It is the furthest space exploration mission undertaken in human history, coming 57 years after American astronauts first set foot on the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969.
The countdown began at 4.44pm EST this afternoon with the rocket taking off at 6.35pm EST. Optimal weather allowed for the launch to be cleared, with backup windows scheduled through the week until April 6.
The ten-day journey saw the astronauts launch into orbit and then separate their Orion spacecraft from the launch vehicle, break out of low-Earth orbit, circle the moon and then return.
The historic flight is the first step in NASA's new multi-step to land on the moon by 2028 at the earliest.
During NASA's post-launch press conference, space agency chief Jared Isaacman revealed Artemis II suffered a communications issue, preventing NASA from hearing the crew's messages for a brief time.
Isaacman added that the issue was not affecting the rest of the craft and NASA would be working to figure out what caused the temporary blackout.
'About 51 minutes into the flight, during a planned handover between satellites, the Orion spacecraft underwent a communications issue, leading to a temporary partial loss,' Isaacman said at a press conference.
'The uplink from Cap Com [Capsule Communication] to the crew was being heard by the crew, but we can’t hear the responses for a brief period of time,' he added, noting the issue has been resolved.
Isaacman said, 'There were no issues with the vehicle itself. Comms with the crew have been restored. We’re actively working the issue.'
NASA has said the Artemis campaign is about laying the groundwork for future Mars missions, harnessing space's economic benefits and creating an enduring human presence beyond Earth.
It's also—as is anything these days in the United States—about heading off China's own lunar land grab: Washington wants to remain in front of Beijing's own plans to put a man on the moon by 2030.
But Artemis appears to be the opening step in a much more consequential infrastructure race that also pits Washington against Beijing—a giant leap toward an extraterrestrial AI future.