Here’s the latest on Artemis II crew based on recent reporting:
Direct answer
- Artemis II carried four astronauts: Reid Wiseman (NASA, commander), Victor Glover (NASA, pilot), Christina Koch (NASA, mission specialist), and Jeremy Hansen (Canadian Space Agency, mission specialist). They flew a lunar flyby mission in early 2026 and have since returned to Earth.[4][8]
Key updates you might want
- The mission objective was to test Orion’s life-support and deep-space systems during a roughly 10-day lunar flyby, paving the way for future crewed lunar landings. The crew was reported to be in good spirits and the spacecraft/trajectory operations proceeded as planned.[5][4]
- Public updates from NASA and major outlets highlighted successful translunar injection, in-flight operations near the Moon, and a return trajectory that concluded with splashdown in the Pacific. You’ll see ongoing follow-ups about post-mission analyses and next steps for Artemis III and beyond.[8][5]
Illustrative context
- Artemis II is the first crewed test of Orion on a lunar-distance loop in decades, a critical step before any lunar landings. The four crew members bring NASA experience across spaceflight and Christina Koch adds substantial long-duration mission expertise.[3][4]
If you’d like, I can pull a concise timeline of the mission milestones (launch, translunar injection, lunar flyby, splashdown) and provide a quick 1-page summary with citations.