00:00From the cabin of integrity here, as we surpass the furthest distance humans have ever traveled from planet Earth,
00:08we do so in honoring the extraordinary efforts and feats of our predecessors in human space exploration.
00:17We will continue our journey even further into space before Mother Earth succeeds in pulling us back to everything that
00:25we hold dear.
00:27But we, most importantly, choose this moment to challenge this generation and the next to make sure this record is
00:35not long-lived.
00:37Thank you, Houston.
00:38We have a couple more things we'd like to take this moment for.
00:43Our science team helped us out with a couple of relatively fresh craters on the moon that have not been
00:50previously named,
00:52and our crew would like to propose a couple of potential names for those items or those areas.
00:59And we spent a bit of time this morning looking out the window and we're able to see them now,
01:04both with our naked eye and through the long lens, and so we feel this is a good time to
01:09send this down
01:10and a special shout out to Kelsey for helping us with this.
01:14The first one we'd like to suggest is a named crater in honor of our great spacecraft, Integrity.
01:23And so if you were to look at Oriental on the far side and then draw a line straight up
01:29to Ohm on the far side,
01:31relatively in the middle is an unnamed crater, and we would like to suggest it be called Integrity in the
01:37future.
01:41And the second one, and especially meaningful for this crew, is a number of years ago,
01:48we started this journey in our close-knit astronaut family, and we lost a loved one.
01:54And there's a feature in a really neat place on the moon, and it is on the near side, far
02:00side boundary.
02:01In fact, it's just on the near side of that boundary, and so at certain times of the moon's transit
02:09around Earth,
02:10you can, we will be able to see this from Earth.
02:13And so we lost a loved one.
02:15Her name was Carol, the spouse of Reed, the mother of Katie and Ellie.
02:26And if you want to find this one, you look at Glushko,
02:30and it's just to the northwest of that, at the same latitude as Ohm, and it's a bright spot on
02:36the moon.
02:39And we would like to call it Carol, and you spell that C-A-R-R-O-L-L.
02:47And it's just a little bit more.
02:55And that's fun.
02:57It really is designed in T-A-R-O-L-L.
02:57It's just a fair little bit more at the end of the moon.
02:57I want to call it a C-A-R-O-L.
02:59And so, I want to call it the time.
03:00Grazie a tutti.
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