See the first close-up photos of the moon from NASA’s Artemis II mission

Trump signs an executive order to create federal voter lists President Donald Trump signed another election-related executive order..Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images

For the first time, humans have glimpsed the entire far side of the moon with their own eyes — and their photos are beginning to come in.

In what was the most highly anticipated moment of the Artemis II mission, four astronauts flew around the moon Monday, snapping photos and making detailed observations from the window of their Orion spacecraft.

NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen captured a slew of photos of the moon’s rugged terrain, sprawling impact craters and vast, dark plains.

The first photo released from the flyby, shared Tuesday morning by the White House on X, shows “Earthset,” a moment captured from the lunar far side as Earth dipped out of view on the opposite edge of the moon.

The new image is a kind of re-creation of the iconic “Earthrise” photo taken during the Apollo 8 mission in 1968. The Apollo 8 photo, however, showed Earth reemerging into view, rather than disappearing, as astronauts Bill Anders, Frank Borman and Jim Lovell circumnavigated the moon.

On December 24, 1968 during the Apollo 8 mission, the Earth rose into view over the Moon's limb.
The iconic “Earthrise” photo taken Dec. 24, 1968 during the Apollo 8 mission.William Anders / NASA

The White House also shared a spectacular photo that the Artemis II astronauts snapped of a solar eclipse from space. The eclipse occurred Monday evening, toward the end of the hourslong lunar flyby, when the sun slipped behind the moon.

The astronauts became the first people to view a solar eclipse from the moon. The new image shows a darkened moon with the sun’s outermost atmosphere, the corona, glowing around the edges.


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Sam Miller

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