NASA's Artemis II mission, a manned lunar orbit flight, is scheduled to launch as early as tomorrow morning, marking humanity's first lunar orbit in over half a century. According to RTHK, the mission is planned to commence at 6:24 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday. The new-generation Space Launch System rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, sending three American astronauts and one Canadian astronaut into lunar orbit for a ten-day mission.
NASA reports that final preparations for the launch are progressing smoothly, with an 80% chance of favorable weather conditions. The Artemis program was announced by the United States in 2019, and the Artemis I unmanned lunar orbit test mission was completed in November 2022. The Artemis II mission is the first manned mission under this program. NASA plans to conduct the Artemis III mission next year to test systems and operational capabilities in low Earth orbit, with the Artemis IV lunar landing mission scheduled for 2028.