NEED TO KNOW
- Artemis II launches at 6:24 p.m. EDT today from Kennedy Space Center in Florida
- Four astronauts will circle the moon for first crewed lunar mission since Apollo 17 in 1972
- Program faces criticism for $93 billion cost and decade of delays from original schedule
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (TDR) — NASA’s Artemis II mission is scheduled to launch today at 6:24 p.m. EDT, sending four astronauts on a 10-day journey around the moon—the first crewed lunar flight in more than 50 years.
The big picture: The launch marks a pivotal test for NASA’s ambitious Artemis program, which aims to return humans to the lunar surface by 2028 and establish a permanent presence, even as critics question whether the $93 billion investment justifies repeating achievements from the Apollo era.
- The mission features a “free-return trajectory” where four astronauts will loop around the moon without landing, traveling farther from Earth than any humans in history
- Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen make up the crew—representing the first woman, first person of color, and first non-American to travel to lunar vicinity
- The Orion spacecraft could break Apollo 13’s distance record of 248,655 miles from Earth
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Why it matters: Beyond symbolic achievement, the mission tests systems critical for future Mars expeditions while the space agency navigates political pressure to justify costs that have ballooned far beyond initial projections.
- The Government Accountability Office found the program has cost $93 billion since 2012, with the Orion spacecraft alone exceeding cost baselines by $3.2 billion
- Each Space Launch System rocket launch costs approximately $4.1 billion, prompting senior NASA officials to privately acknowledge the system is “unaffordable at current cost levels”
- The launch comes amid workforce challenges, with nearly 4,000 NASA employees accepting “deferred resignations” last year under the Trump administration’s federal workforce reduction efforts
Driving the news: Final preparations are underway after weather officers confirmed an 80% chance of favorable conditions for the two-hour launch window.
- The crew woke at 9:25 a.m. EDT to begin final preparations, with fueling operations commencing early this morning
- The mission was delayed from February and March after engineers discovered hydrogen leaks and faulty helium seals requiring repairs
- Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson — “The run up to the countdown start has gone extremely smooth”
What they’re saying: Supporters frame the launch as essential for American leadership in space, while critics argue the program’s reliance on outdated technology and infrequent launches undermines both safety and value.
- NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman — “We have to rebuild core competencies… The ability to turn around our launch pads and launch with frequency greater than every three years is imperative”
- Casey Dreier, chief of space policy at The Planetary Society — “This rocket was originally supposed to launch in 2016 and cost $5 billion. It costs something like $20 billion now, 10 years after that”
- Eric Berger, senior space editor at Ars Technica — “It would take a lot of miracles for a landing in 2028 to happen”
Yes, but: The mission represents genuine progress for deep-space exploration, with the crew set to validate life-support systems and reentry procedures at speeds of 25,000 mph that commercial alternatives have not yet achieved.
- The Orion heat shield—which showed unexpected cracking during the uncrewed Artemis I test—has been cleared for flight with trajectory modifications
- International partnerships, including Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen’s participation, provide diplomatic value beyond scientific returns
- Success could validate the “free-return trajectory” technique essential for future Mars missions where abort options are limited
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Between the lines: The timing serves political purposes as much as scientific ones—with the launch providing a high-profile success story for an administration facing scrutiny over cuts to federal science programs and workforce reductions at NASA.
- The White House proposed phasing out the SLS rocket earlier this year before Congress restored nearly $10 billion in funding
- NASA’s safety panel warned last month of “high safety risk” regarding the “ambitious timeline” for subsequent lunar landing missions
- China’s announced 2030 lunar landing goal creates pressure for the U.S. to demonstrate progress, even if the path remains uncertain
What’s next:
- Splashdown expected in the Pacific Ocean on April 10 after the 10-day mission
- Artemis III—originally planned as a lunar landing—will now serve as a low-Earth orbit test in 2027 for docking procedures with commercial landers
- Artemis IV, now targeted for 2028, aims to put the first woman and person of color on the lunar surface
If Artemis II succeeds in validating systems for deep-space human exploration, does the $93 billion investment represent necessary foundation-building for Mars—or has congressional insistence on reusing shuttle-era technology created a program optimized for job preservation rather than sustainable space access?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from NASA, NBC News, Spaceflight Now, UPI, and ClickOrlando.
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