Key moments from the Artemis II lunar fly-bypublished at 05:56 BST
Image source, NASAHere, Earth is the small white crescent to the right of the Moon. The photo was taken moments before Artemis II lost contact with Nasa
It has been a historic day for the Artemis II crew, who are now bound for Earth after completing a fly-by of the Moon. Here's what has happened over the past few hours:
- At around 19:00 BST, the Artemis II crew broke the record for the furthest humans have ever travelled from Earth - the previous record of 248,655 miles (400,171km) from Earth was set by the Apollo 13 crew in 1970
- The Orion spacecraft then passed behind the Moon, temporarily losing contact with Nasa back on Earth - the outage was expected and lasted around 40 minutes
- "Houston, Integrity, comms check," were the first words from mission specialist Christina Koch when contact was re-established, who also said it was "so great to hear the Earth again"
- While flying behind the Moon, the Orion spacecraft also reached its maximum distance from Earth - a new record for the furthest distance travelled by humans from our home planet
- The new record has been set at 252,756 miles (406,771km)
- Next for the crew was a quick break before observing total solar eclipse, which lasted about an hour - the astronauts spent that time taking photographs and telling the science team in Houston what they could see, noting that there were "not enough adjectives" to describe the "surreal" experience
- As the four astronauts began the process of sending all their data from the past seven hours of observation to Earth, they also received a call from US President Donald Trump - you can read a recap of their conversation here





