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Artemis Astronauts Loop Moon, Eyes on Science

Published 2 weeks ago
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Artemis Two Astronauts to Loop the Moon: Eyes Beat Cameras for Lunar Science

Over fifty years after the Apollo missions, the Artemis Two astronauts are set to loop the Moon on Monday, relying heavily on their eyes for scientific observations. The human eye, according to experts, surpasses any camera in spotting color shifts, lighting effects, and surface textures up close.

The four-member crew, including commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, specialist Christina Koch, and Canadas Jeremy Hansen, trained for two years like field geologists. They attended classrooms, hiked volcanic spots in Iceland and Canada, ran Moon flyby simulations, and memorized the fifteen biggest lunar landmarks using a big inflatable globe.

The team is excited, and ground scientists get chills just from practice runs describing what they see. The human eye excels at how sunlight angles reveal craters and hues that photos miss, helping rank ten key science targets during the hours-long pass. Cameras help too, but real-time human observations add context no machine can match.

NASA is streaming the event live, minus the back-of-the-Moon blackout, allowing us all to hear fresh eyes on the lunar playground and revive that raw wonder from the Apollo days.

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