HOUSTON (AP) â Still aglow from their triumphant lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts put in a call to their friends aboard the International Space Station on Tuesday as they headed home from the moon.
It was the first moonship-to-spaceship radio linkup ever. NASAâs Apollo crews had no off-the-planet company back in the 1960s and 1970s, the last time humanity set sail for deep space.
âWe have been waiting for this like you canât imagine,â Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman called out.
For Christina Koch on Artemis II and Jessica Meir aboard the space station, it marked a joyous space reunion despite being 230,000 miles (370,000 kilometers) apart. The two teamed up for the worldâs first all-female spacewalk in 2019 outside the orbiting lab.
Koch told her âastro-sisterâ that sheâd hoped to meet up with her again in space âbut I never thought it would be like this â itâs amazing.â
âIâm so happy that we are back in space together,â Meir replied, âeven if we are a few miles apart.â
Houstonâs Mission Control arranged the cosmic chitchat between the four lunar travelers and the space stationâs three NASA and one French residents.
As Tuesday dawned, Wiseman continued to beam back pictures of the previous dayâs lunar rendezvous, which set a new distance record for humanity. The highlight: an Earthset photo reminiscent of Apollo 8âs Earthrise shot from 1968.
Koch described being awe-struck by not just the beauty of Earth, âbut how much blackness there was around it.â
âIt just made it even more special. It truly emphasized how alike we are, how the same thing keeps every single person on planet Earth alive,â she told the space station crew. âThe specialness and preciousness of that really is emphasizedâ when viewing the home planet from the moon.
In a debriefing later with Mission Controlâs lead lunar scientist Kelsey Young, the astronauts recounted how they spotted a cascade of pinpricks of light on the lunar surface from impacting cosmic debris. The flashes lasted mere milliseconds and coincided by chance with Monday eveningâs total solar eclipse.
The first lunar explorers since Apollo 17 in 1972, Wiseman and his crew are aiming for a Friday splashdown off the San Diego coast on Friday to wrap up the nearly 10-day test flight.
It sets the stage for next yearâs Artemis III, a lunar lander docking demo in orbit around Earth. Artemis IV will follow in 2028 with two astronauts attempting to land near the lunar south pole.
As for the Orion capsuleâs pesky potty, Mission Control assured the astronauts that no repairs were required Tuesday. The toilet has been on-and-off limits to the crew ever since last weekâs launch, prompting them to rely on a backup bag-and-funnel system for urinating.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman told the crew following the lunar flyby Monday night: âWe definitely have to fix some of the plumbingâ ahead of the next Artemis mission.
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