0 użytkowników i 4 Gości przegląda ten wątek.
Yeah, I think we might've gotten cut off. It is a long distance. It's a long ways. The reception's been great. There's a little bit of about a nine-second delay, but no, I just had a statement for, I don't know what you heard, but I was just saying they're very proud of your brilliant person from Canada on the ship. And Wayne Gretzky is a great friend of mine, and he's very proud of them. And the prime minister I spoke to, they're very, very honored that you have a courageous person from Canada. You have a lot of courageous people from Canada. So it was very nice. I'm not sure if you heard me say that, but it was very nice.
Po prostu cudo. W oryginalnej wersji idzie na tapetę! Tu pomniejszone (ale i tak FHD), bo oryginał nie przechodzi.
Peeking at the Earthart002e009286 (April 6, 2026) – As the Artemis II crew came close to passing behind the Moon and experiencing a planned loss of signal, they captured this image of a crescent Earth setting on the Moon’s limb. The edge of the visible surface of the Moon is called the “lunar limb.” Seen from afar, it almost looks like a circular arc – except when backlit, as in other images captured by the Artemis II crew. In this photo, the dark portion of Earth is experiencing nighttime, while Australia and Oceania are in the daylight. In the foreground, the Ohm crater is visible, with terraced edges and a flat floor interrupted by central peaks. Peaks such as these form in complex craters when the lunar surface is liquified on impact, and the liquefied surface splashes upward during the crater’s formation. Credit: NASA Uploaded on April 7, 2026 Taken on April 6, 2026Nikon D5 80.0-400.0 mm f/4.5-5.6
Eclipse Safety Firstart002e009302 (April 6, 2026) – The Artemis II crew – Mission Specialist Christina Koch (top left), Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen (bottom left), Commander Reid Wiseman (bottom right), and Pilot Victor Glover (top right) – uses eclipse viewers, identical to what NASA produced for the 2023 annular eclipse and 2024 total solar eclipse, to protect their eyes at key moments during the solar eclipse they experienced during their lunar flyby. This was the first use of eclipse glasses at the Moon to safely view a solar eclipse.Credit: NASA Uploaded on April 7, 2026, Taken on April 7, 2026Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max, iPhone 17 Pro Max front camera 2.715mm f/1.9
Wzruszający moment: tuż po pobiciu rekordu Apollo 13 załoga zaproponowała nazwanie dwóch kraterów na powierzchni. Pierwszy z nich - IntegrityDrugi - Carroll, na pamiątkę zmarłej żony Reida Wisemana
NASA Artemis @NASAArtemisHere is a labeled image so you can see the craters more clearly!
W siódmym dniu misji odbyła się rozmowa z załogą ISS oraz odpalono silnik w ramach RTC-1 (Return Trajectory Correction 1 Burn).