Key Takeaways:

The Artemis II crew traveled further from Earth than any human in history, they broke a record that stood for 55 years.
The Orion spacecraft passed the old distance record set by the famous Apollo 13 mission in 1970.
This mission proves that the Orion ship is safe and ready to carry people on long trips to the Moon and back.

The four astronauts on the Orion spacecraft traveled further away from our home planet than anyone before them. According to the official NASA mission update, the ship reached a distance of about 252,757 miles (406,774 km). This is a big deal because it is the first time we have gone this far since the Apollo missions ended in the 1970s.

New record🥇
The Artemis II astronauts are now farther from Earth than humans have ever been! At 1:57 p.m. EDT, they broke the record set by Apollo 13 in 1970.
Their journey around the far side of the Moon today will take them a maximum distance of 252,752 miles from Earth. pic.twitter.com/P5Swojpn0n
— NASA Earth (@NASAEarth) April 6, 2026

Why This Record is Different from Apollo 13
To understand why this is special, we have to look back at the record. In 1970, the crew of Apollo 13 went far from Earth because of an accident. After an oxygen tank exploded, they had to fly in a circle around the Moon to get home safely. It was a life saving move, not the plan. For Artemis II going this far was a plan. NASA wanted to push the ship to limits to make sure the air, water, and heat systems can work in deep space.

Testing the Road to the Moon
The job of Artemis II is to make sure that everything is ready for the next mission, Artemis III, where people will walk on the Moon again. Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen are checking how the ship handles space radiation and extreme cold. This information is like a test drive for the highway to the Moon. They are making sure future missions are safe for the next generation of explorers by going further.
Read Next: Artemis II Success: Orion Carried Humans Toward the Moon for the First Time in 50 Years 
Breaking this record shows that we are no longer visiting space, we are building the tools to stay there. NASA is building the space highway that will take us to Mars.
The First Step to a New Future
Artemis II is the first time in more than 50 years that humans are close to the Moon. But this time is different. The crew is more diverse, and the technology is more powerful than the computers used in the 1960s. When Orion begins to head back to Earth, it is sending back the clearest pictures and data. 
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