Astronauts out of contact with Nasa for estimated 40 minutespublished at 23:44 BST 6 AprilBreaking
Pallab Ghosh
Science correspondent
Orion has just slipped behind the bulk of the Moon and out of radio contact with Earth.
Engineers have always known this moment was coming – part of the flight plan – but when the signal drops, it's still a tense moment.
Right now, four astronauts are arcing round the far side of the Moon, further from home and more cut off than any humans have been for more than 50 years. There will be no comforting murmur for them from Mission Control, just the faint hum of fans and electronics as Orion follows its pre‑programmed path.
Outside the window, they are seeing landscapes we have only ever mapped with robots – steep‑walled craters, mountains thrown up by ancient impacts, and highlands pummelled by billions of years of debris.
For the next several minutes or so there is nothing anyone on Earth can do but wait. The spacecraft’s computers will handle the crucial engine burn that bends Orion onto its long loop home.
If everything goes to plan, the first sign that all is well will be a simple one: the signal returning followed by a cheery voice of one of the astronauts.









