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NASA on May 5, 2026 released a trove of more than 12,000 photographs taken by the Artemis II crew during their April lunar flyby, publishing 12,217 images to public archives including the Johnson Space Center gateway.
The pictures were captured during the 10-day mission that launched April 1 and splashed down April 10, carrying Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen aboard the Orion spacecraft.
The images include dramatic “Earthset” and far-side lunar views, detailed shots of craters, ridges and lava flows, long-exposure star trails, a solar eclipse seen from lunar distance, and candid interior crew photos.
Cameras cited in the release include Nikon D5 and Z9 bodies and consumer devices.
NASA said the full dataset — previously limited by in-flight transmission constraints until crewmember SD cards returned to Earth — will support scientific study of lunar topography and help planners preparing for Artemis III and future lunar landings, while providing unprecedented public access to deep-space astronaut photography.
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NBC News Top StoriesNASA released thousands more photos from Artemis II. Here are 9 of the best.
International Business Times AustraliaNASA Quietly Drops Over 12,000 Stunning Artemis II Photos from Historic Lunar Flyby








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