NASA’s Artemis II astronauts have fired their engines and are blazing toward the moon.
The so-called translunar ignition got here 25 hours after liftoff, putting the three Americans and one Canadian on target for a lunar fly-around early next week.
Their Orion capsule has bolted out of orbit around Earth and chased after the moon nearly 250,000 miles away.
This image taken from video provided by NASA shows the Earth, left, from NASA’s Orion spacecraft because it fired its engines heading toward the moon Thursday, April 2, 2026.
(NASA via AP)
The Canadian Space Agency posted on social media Thursday evening saying that NASA confirmed that each one critical systems onboard were so as and that Artemis II could proceed its trajectory.
“It’s official! Jeremy Hansen becomes the primary Canadian in history to go to the Moon,” the statement from the Canadian Space Agency said.

Get breaking National news
Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox because it happens so you will not miss a trending story.
Hansen spoke to NASA from contained in the Orion capsule minutes after the thruster firing, praising the milestone for humanity.
He said the crew was glued to the windows, calling the view “phenomenal.”
4 astronauts — including Hansen — aboard the Orion spacecraft lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:35 p.m. Wednesday, shortly after the two-hour launch window opened. Hansen was joined by veteran NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch.
The ten-day mission is predicted to take humans the farthest they’ve ever gone before in space and can see humanity travel to the moon for the primary time in greater than 50 years.

It’s the primary engine firing for a moon crew since Apollo 17 set out on that era’s final moonshot in 1972.
NASA had the Artemis II crew stick near home for a day to check their capsule’s life-support systems before clearing them for lunar departure.
Experts say Artemis II represents greater than only a return to lunar orbit — it could lay the groundwork for deeper space exploration.
–with files from The Associated Press


