April 7, 2026Captured during NASA’s Artemis II lunar flyby, this breathtaking close-up reveals the Moon’s ancient, battered surface in stunning new detail. Towering crater rims, jagged mountain peaks, and deep shadows stretch across the rugged terrain — scars left by billions of years of cosmic impacts, volcanic activity, and relentless space weathering.Seen from the crewed Orion spacecraft as it swept past the Moon on April 6, these high-resolution images offer an intimate, astronaut’s-eye view of our celestial neighbor that feels both familiar and profoundly alien. Every ridge, every shadowed basin, and every bright ejecta blanket tells a chapter in the Moon’s violent and fascinating history.For the first time in over half a century, humans are once again flying this close to the lunar surface — paving the way for future landings and sustained exploration.
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