OAN Staff Katherine Mosack
2:55 PM – Saturday, April 4, 2026
The Artemis II astronauts have successfully reached the halfway point on their journey to the moon.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) marked the team’s progress in a post on X Saturday, declaring, “Lock in, we’re Moonbound.”
American astronaut Reid Wiseman remarked that he and the other members on board the Orion capsule had lost track of time after several days in space.
“We heard a rumor up here that it is actually Saturday back on Earth. We have definitely lost track of the days,” he admitted in a voice recording posted to social media by NASA on Saturday.
The administration also noted that the crew woke up to the sound of “Pink Pony Club” by Chappell Roan.
As of Saturday afternoon, the crew seems to be on track to break the record set by Apollo 13, more than 50 years ago.
The previous mission took four days, six hours and 45 minutes to reach the moon. The Eagle lunar module launched on July 16th and touched down on July 20th.
The current team of three Americans and one Canadian is scheduled to arrive in the moon’s orbit on Monday after its launch on Wednesday from Kennedy Space Center. After their lunar flyby, in which they will capture images of the far side of the moon, they plan to splash down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, California, on April 10th.
Artemis II is a test flight to show that NASA’s new deep-space systems can carry humans past low Earth orbit after over five decades of development. The astronauts will test life-support systems, navigation, communications and manual spacecraft controls.
NASA personnel on Earth provided updates in a conference on Saturday, in which Orion Deputy Program Manager Debbie Korth reported that the Orion spacecraft remains in “very good health” after Friday’s routine inspection.
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