NASA's Artemis II Mission Adjusts Trajectory for Lunar Flyby
NASA's Artemis II mission, currently in progress, involves a crewed lunar flyby scheduled for April 6, 2026. The mission's spacecraft, Orion, is on a precise trajectory to the Moon, prompting flight controllers at NASA's Johnson Space Center to cancel the first planned outbound trajectory correction burn. This decision was made because the spacecraft is already on the correct flight path. The Artemis II mission is part of NASA's broader efforts to demonstrate life support systems and prepare for future lunar and Mars missions. The mission includes astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen. The spacecraft has successfully deployed its solar array wings and is in high Earth orbit, with plans for a translunar injection burn to slingshot around the Moon and return to Earth.