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Artemis II breaks Apollo 13’s distance record as humans travel farther from Earth than ever before

A historic milestone in human space exploration as Artemis II surpasses the distance achieved by Apollo 13.

editorial-staff
2 min read
Updated 4 days ago
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Summary

The Artemis II mission has officially surpassed the distance record previously held by Apollo 13, indicating a notable achievement in human space exploration.

This milestone reflects advancements in spacecraft design and mission planning, enhancing the capacity for deep space travel.

As Artemis II continues its journey, the implications for future missions and infrastructure development in space are significant, potentially reshaping operational frameworks for interplanetary exploration.

Updates

Update at 18:14 UTC on 2026-04-06

Phys.org reported The four astronauts embarking on NASA's lunar flyby became the humans to travel farthest from our planet, preparing to view areas of the moon never before seen by the naked eye.

Sources: Phys.org

Update at 18:37 UTC on 2026-04-06

Le Monde reported The Artemis II team broke Apollo 13's previous record, traveling 4,101 miles even deeper into space. After the astronauts' flyby of the moon, they pointed their moonship toward home on Monday night.

Sources: Le Monde

Update at 04:14 UTC on 2026-04-07

Financial Times reported Donald Trump congratulates crew and promises Nasa will establish human lunar presence.

Sources: Financial Times

Update at 21:42 UTC on 2026-04-07

Le Monde reported The crew shared an image that was a nod to the iconic Earthrise image taken by the Apollo 8 mission from 1968.

Sources: Le Monde