NASA releases jaw-dropping Artemis II photos of Earth and Moon from unprecedented angles. The images rack up millions of social media likes as four astronauts venture farther from home than any humans since 1972.
Commander Reid Wiseman snapped “Hello, World” from 142,000 miles away—equidistant from both bodies. Earth eclipses the Sun with dual auroras while Venus glows below. The upside-down planet reveals Sahara, Iberia, and South America.
Orion packs 32 cameras: 15 mounted, 17 handheld. Astronauts wield Nikon D5s, GoPros, and iPhone 17 Pro Max. Even the spacecraft window needed cleaning from excited picture-taking.
Saturday’s shot reveals Moon’s far-side Orientale basin—a massive crater field ahead of Monday’s 4,066-mile flyby. NASA hails “history in the making,” but questions linger: do these dazzle more as holiday snaps than scientific breakthroughs?
NASA’s Deep Space Climate Observatory already images Earth from a million miles via its EPIC camera. Artemis photos thrill millions and build public support through live-streams and triumphant updates.
