The Artemis II astronauts captured incredlibe photos from the far side of the moon including a solar eclipse.

Artemis II remains on course for its lunar flyby as the crew shares historic photos of Earth, tests key systems for future lunar missions, and attempts to fix the toilet.

Crew members of Artemis II set a distance record for humanity on April 6 as they flew beyond the lunar surface while over 250,000 miles from Earth.

The Moon, the Earth, and the Sun; oh what fun!

The Artemis II astronauts captured incredlibe photos from the far side of the moon including a solar eclipse.

The first images from Artemis II reveal what the moon looks like just 7,000 km from the surface—and confirm that NASA is ready to return to Earth’s satellite.

The photos show an eclipse and a distant Earth disappearing behind the moon, a disorienting and surreal perspective. Here's what to know.

Extreme close-ups of Artemis photos reveal the moon’s rugged texture, from crater rims to ancient scars etched into lunar rock.