NASA Live Streams Artemis II Crew Training As Moon Mission Nears
NASA Live Streams Artemis II Crew Training As Moon Mission Nears...
NASA is broadcasting live footage of Artemis II astronaut training today as the agency prepares for its first crewed Moon mission in over 50 years. The 24-hour livestream, which began at 6 AM ET from Houston's Johnson Space Center, shows astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen rehearsing lunar orbit maneuvers in simulators.
The unprecedented public access comes exactly one year before Artemis II's scheduled launch in April 2027. NASA officials say the stream aims to build excitement for the mission that will send humans 6,400 miles beyond the Moon. Viewership spiked this morning when Koch became the first woman to pilot the Orion capsule simulator during a live broadcast.
Social media platforms are flooded with reactions as over 280,000 concurrent viewers tune in. The training includes emergency scenarios like cabin depressurization and solar flare exposure. NASA Administrator Bill Nelson called it "a new era of transparency" during a brief appearance on the stream at 10:15 AM ET.
The Artemis program has gained renewed attention this week after Congress approved $7.6 billion in additional funding. Today's live training follows last month's successful uncrewed Artemis I test flight. NASA plans intermittent commentary throughout the day, with the next major demonstration—a simulated lunar flyby—scheduled for 2:30 PM ET.
Viewers can watch on NASA's website, YouTube channel, or the NASA app. The agency confirmed the stream will archive all footage for educational use. This marks the most extensive public viewing of astronaut training since the Apollo program, with particular interest in Glover and Koch—who will become the first Black man and first woman to travel beyond low Earth orbit.