00:00...today in the Artemis Mission Control Viewing Room.
00:20As I was mentioning, we have the Orion spacecraft flying today.
00:25However, the Artemis crew members named their Orion spacecraft Integrity,
00:29so you will hear calls to this entire crew with the name Integrity.
00:33They say that the name Integrity embodies the foundation of trust, respect, candor, and humility across the crew
00:40and the many engineers, technicians, scientists, planners, and dreamers required for mission success.
00:55This view live from the outside of Orion as we continue preparing for our lunar flyby,
01:03now less than five minutes from surpassing the record set by Apollo 13 astronauts
01:07for the farthest humans to travel from Earth.
01:09This will not be the farthest that Integrity travels today.
01:15They will continue until they reach approximately a distance of 252,760 miles.
01:24That would be about 4,105 miles farther than Apollo 13.
01:29Integrity crew, on April 15, 1970, during the Apollo 13 mission,
01:36three explorers set the record for the farthest distance humans have ever traveled from our home planet.
01:42At that time, over 55 years ago,
01:46Lovell, Swigert, and Hayes flew 248,655 statute miles away from Earth.
01:54Today, for all humanity, you're pushing beyond that frontier.
01:58Integrity, over to you.
02:10Yeah, from the cabin of Integrity here,
02:14as we surpass the furthest distance humans have ever traveled from planet Earth,
02:19if we do so on Earth, we will be able to see this from Earth.
02:24And so we lost a loved one.
02:26Her name was Carol.
02:29The spouse of Reed, the mother of Katie and Ellie.
02:37And if you want to find this one, you look at Glushko,
02:41and it's just to the northwest of that, at the same latitude as home,
02:45and it's a bright spot on the moon.
02:50And we would like to call her Carol.
02:53And you spell that C-A-R-R-O-L-L.
02:59Thank you.
03:15Thank you.
03:50As the Artemis 2 crew passed the record set by Apollo 13
03:54for the farthest humans to ever fly from Earth
03:58at 12.57 p.m. Central Time, 1.57 p.m. Eastern Time.
04:05Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen shared...
04:08We're getting ourselves all put back together now,
04:10and we are going to dim the cabin lights
04:11and prepare for our science objectives ahead.
04:14Thank you.
04:17Sounds good.
04:17We're doing the same down here,
04:19and you are maneuvering to your observation attitude.
04:28As we pass that Apollo 13 record of the furthest humans to ever fly from Earth,
04:34at 12.57 p.m. Central Time, 1.57 p.m. Eastern Time,
04:39the Artemis 2 crew shared some poignant words,
04:42specifically Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
04:46The crew also called down two craters not yet named that they would like to name.
04:50One, Integrity, in honor of their spacecraft, which they have named.
04:56That's near the Ohm crater.
04:59Another near Glushko, which is a bright spot, named Carol,
05:02in memory of Reed Wiseman's wife.
05:11There was a moment of silence here in Mission Control Houston,
05:16and now the team and the Artemis 2 crew are ready to begin their lunar flyby.
05:22Thank you.
05:35Thank you.
06:06Thank you.
06:36Thank you.
07:05And the crew's timeline today will be their cabin configuration portion.
07:09For Kelsey Young earlier,
07:11about how they have configured the cabin so far,
07:13of timelined activity for them, if they need.
07:18On flight day three,
07:19the crew had to craft cabin for how they intended to arrange it today.
07:24Take down that configuration for another test yesterday,
07:28of their Orion crew survive,
07:29but configuring it on flight day three allows them the opportunities for them
07:33now that they are in the microgravity environment.
07:37Thank you.
07:38and coincidentally,
08:08Gracias por ver el video.
08:38The official lunar flyby observations are slated to begin in just about 40 minutes.
08:45That's when we'll have the crew at the windows photographing the moon, as well as making calls down about what
08:50they are seeing.
09:02Again, we are live here in Artemis Mission Control for the duration of the flyby.
09:06Currently, the Orbit 1 flight control team is on console.
09:10This room is staffed 24-7 from the time before the astronauts step foot on the rocket until the time
09:17they are splashed down and are safely recovered in the Pacific Ocean on flight day 10.
09:22Thank you.
09:23Thank you.
09:48Thank you.
09:49Gracias.
10:19Gracias.
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