This is a picture of a space sailor looking out the window of his boat while traveling with a speed of 3414 km/h toward the Moon, taken from outside the boat.

That must be another first. It feels like good ol' NASA again.

Image captured from NASA's live coverage stream.

#Artemis2 #Moon #NASA #solarocks #space

This is the high resolution version of the livestream capture above, cropped.

A picture of a space sailor looking out the window of his boat while traveling with a speed of 3414 km/h toward the Moon, taken from outside the boat.

Artemis II Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, of the Canadian Space Agency (#CSA) 🇨🇦 .

Credit: NASA Johnson
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/55195961058

#Orion #Artemis2 #NASA #Moon #Solarocks #Space

…and a less clear one of Reid Wiseman, Commander (top), and Christina Koch, Mission Specialist (bottom), both of #NASA. A picture of Victor Glover (pilot, NASA) has not be found in NASA's photostream.

Credit: NASA Johnson
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/55194920227/

#Orion #Artemis2 #Moon #Solarock #Space

@65dBnoise Sickest selfie in the universe
@65dBnoise can someone insert the Canadian flag please 🇨🇦
Hat tip to whomever had the idea of taking pictures like the ones above, using the cameras at the end of the four solar arrays. It's usually someone of the numerous unsung heroes working to make success stories like the Artemis II mission happen.
@65dBnoise I totally approve of this modern spaceflight trend of “put GoPro cameras everywhere”.
@c_dan4th @65dBnoise the only reason we didn't put them on our sounding rocket was because thermal management would have taken too much time.

No picture of Artemis II Pilot Victor Glover (NASA) yet, but to have the crew quartet complete, here is one of him looking outside a window sometime after the other pictures were taken.

Credit: NASA Johnson
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/55196961359/

#Orion #Artemis2 #Moon #NASA #Solarocks #Space

@65dBnoise The ultimate selfie stick.
@65dBnoise I think these early photos were low-res because NASA needed bandwidth for higher res pics (?) So more to come...