A crescent Earth as seen from the Artemis II Orion Integrity spacecraft, now over 46,000 km away. The spacecraft is located above the north-east coast of Brazil, where it is night-time

22/n

The serene view of the Pale Blue Crescent from the Artemis II Orion Integrity spacecraft this morning, now located 70,920 km away in its elliptical orbit, high above the Pacific Ocean, west of Peru, as the astronauts grab some sleep after a hectic day yesterday.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3kR2KK8TEs
23/n

Integrity, the Artemis II Orion Integrity spacecraft, is located 71,245 km away, almost 2x the alt. of GSO, in a highly elliptical orbit, above the Pacific Ocean, west of Peru.

After reaching Apogee, it will turn around and execute a Perigee Raising Burn at around 8:15 a.m. EDT (12:15 UTC) and head back towards Earth.

12 hours later, at Perigee, it will execute the Translunar Injection Burn and shoot for the Moon.

https://www.n2yo.com/?s=99999&live=1
https://eyes.nasa.gov/apps/solar-system/#/sc_artemis_2
https://www.nasa.gov/artemis-ii-press-kit/
24/n

Artemis II astronauts woke up this morning at 7:06 a.m. EDT with the song “Sleepyhead” by Young and Sick.

They then completed the perigee raise burn by igniting the Orion service module’s main engine for 43 seconds, which modified the trajectory to a 191x70133 km elliptical orbit. Perigee in another 12 hours or so.

The crew members will rest for another 4.5 hours before they are again awakened to start their first full day in space.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIW-w-P2nOc
https://www.nasa.gov/blogs/missions/2026/04/02/artemis-ii-flight-update-perigee-raise-burn-complete/
25/n

Sleepyhead

YouTube

Artemis II has a total of 28 camera systems, many for internal and external inspection and navigation, 4 located on each of Orion’s 4 solar arrays.

The fixed engineering cameras are primarily meant for in-flight inspection of the spacecraft. But they also opportunistically capture images of Earth and the moon in the background.

The astronauts carry two handheld Nikon D5 digital SLR 20.8 MP cameras for hi-res images and videos.

https://talkoftitusville.com/2025/12/24/what-cameras-will-the-artemis-ii-astronauts-have-aboard/
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/20230017638/downloads/1325_Melendrez_Orion%20Imaging%20Capabilities.pdf
26/n

Check out this dashboard for real-time status and telemetry from Artemis II.

https://artemis.cdnspace.ca/

h/t @cdnspace
https://fosstodon.org/@cdnspace@mstdn.ca/116336006900298832
27/n

Artemis II Tracker — Live Mission Control

Real-time mission control dashboard tracking NASA's Artemis II crewed lunar flyby. Live telemetry, DSN comms, orbit visualization, and crew activities.

Canadian Space
@AkaSci @cdnspace This is the best tracker site for the mission I've seen anywhere. Good job, CSA!

@AkaSci Nice graphic! I haven't found anywhere that is continuously streaming imagery from any of those.

Any links/ideas?

Edit: Oh there is a feed at:
https://www.nasa.gov/live/

NASA Live - NASA

NASA live: Follow live television broadcasts on NASA+, the agency's streaming service, and NASA's social media channels with this schedule of upcoming live events including news briefings, launches and landings.

NASA
@ottaross
This NASA YouTube site has continuous coverage of the Artemis II mission. Tends to show video from one of the solar array cameras, but breaks up occasionally.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RwfNBtepa4
NASA's Artemis II Live Views from Orion

YouTube

@AkaSci I think I've just nabbed the same feed from NASA.gov/live.

Yeah I see what you mean about the break-ups. Nice to ride along though!

@AkaSci I don’t understand how NASA can spend billions on their flagship mission and not have better camera feeds. Why not put a Starlink on Orion? This is their biggest PR event, and we were stuck mainly with renders during launch.

@michaelgemar
Starlink? Starlink satellites look down at earth, not up or sideways at other spacecraft.

Currently, Orion is at ~70,000 km altitude.

NASA has continuous telemetry and video from Artemis II using DSN; they just aren't webcasting it, as one would expect.

https://eyes.nasa.gov/apps/dsn-now/dsn.html

Deep Space Network Now

The real time status of communications with our deep space explorers

Deep Space Network Now
@AkaSci Fair point. They would have certainly helped at launch, but aren’t much use now.

@AkaSci

It amazes me what a big deal this is and how little people are noticing because of all the other terrible distractions.

@AkaSci This means they’re out of the elliptical earth orbit and into lunar trajectory?
@photovince
No, not yet; take a look at new toot #24.
@AkaSci Thanks - just noticed. They are taking the scenic route for sure!

RE: https://f.cz/@xChaos/116333479114503737

@photovince
There is some energy optimization related reason for this orbit and trajectory. Also, unlike uncrewed missions, this spacecraft needs to head for the moon within a day or two after launch.

See post by @xChaos for some more info -

@AkaSci @xChaos Thanks! I remember reading about (reasons behind) complex trajectories a while ago, but that included the lunar gateway so n/a for now
@AkaSci Saw that this morning and it was a very serene view.