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  "path": "/artemis-took-a-picture-of-us",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-03T15:25:26.000Z",
  "site": "https://defector.com",
  "tags": [
    "Science",
    "Shots",
    "artemis",
    "artemis ii",
    "NASA",
    "orion",
    "Space"
  ],
  "textContent": "Artemis II is headed for the Moon; it quite literally cannot _not_ go to the Moon, now. After a trans-lunar injection burn Thursday evening, there physically is not enough fuel on the spacecraft to do anything but relatively small course corrections. It's on a free-return trajectory, which means that the gravity of the Moon and Earth will do the work of getting it back home over the next eight days. If something went wrong and it started to float off into space forever, they could not stop it. This is very terrifying to me, a coward who is bad at math. But the astronauts are neither of those things, so they're copacetic.\n\nSoon after the burn finished, Commander Reid Wiseman snapped the above photo out the window of the Orion crew vehicle. Hey! I know that planet. I live there.\n\nIt is a particularly beautiful photo of Earth. The brown sands of the Sahara dominate the land we can see; the lights of Spain are visible at mid-lower-left. Clouds swirl above the Atlantic. Aurorae are visible as thin green bands in the lower left and upper right. Zoom in on the photo to see just how thin the atmosphere is, to scale: Our home appears both impossibly fragile and strangely robust.",
  "title": "Artemis Took A Picture Of Us"
}