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Feed composed of posts related to NASA’s Artemis Program

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  • 💙 Liked by 45 users
  • 📅 Updated 12 days ago
  • ⚙️ Provider graze.social
  • 📈 In the last 30 days, there were 19 posts about this feed. These posts got a total of 52 likes and had 21 reposts.

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The feed Artemis Program gains approximately 4 likes per month.

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Democrats
@democrats.org
about 1 hour ago
Our planet is beautiful, and she is worth fighting for. Happy Earth Day!
An image of Christina Koch looking out a window at Earth while on the Artemis II mission. Her braid is floating.
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Capt'n Amy, the Girl with the Sun in her Eyes
@captnamy.bsky.social
about 19 hours ago
So, over in Insta, Equality Florida did a post about my supporting the launch of Artemis II. Got a lot of traction, over 34K likes. Lots of nice comments. And of course, hate comments. But so many of them are just lazy. "man" "still a dude" Bigots couldn't even make an effort.
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Curtis Szajkovics
@curtis.bsky.social
about 12 hours ago
The photos from the Artemis 2 mission are stunning. Our next mission will take us to the far side of the Moon and I can't wait.
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Yvette Cendes
@whereisyvette.bsky.social
about 21 hours ago
Four years ago today I saw the Artemis I rocket up close on its launchpad! (It rolled out and back a few times until its Nov 22 launch.) My biggest impression at the time of the SLS is it was VERY impressive and big IRL in a way pictures can’t grasp. Just what you want from a moon rocket! 🧪🎢🔭
Me with the Artemis I rocket
Artemis I rocket with a sign “we are going!”
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Dan Chibnall
@bookowl.bsky.social
about 16 hours ago
The last time the Mets won the Artemis II astronauts were taking photos of the Moon eclipsing the Sun 238,000 miles from Earth.
Moon eclipsing the Sun photo taken in Space
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Gaia Vince
@wanderinggaia.bsky.social
about 17 hours ago
It’s a shame Artemis II went to the moon when it was big and round, not a crescent like now. They could have saved so much time hopping over the thin sliver to get to the Far Side!
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PlasmaNerd
@plasmanerd.bsky.social
about 3 hours ago
Happy Earth Day to our one and only planet. Only planet we know that supports life, and more importantly for us, complex life!
Description from NASA 

The Artemis II crew captured this view of Earth setting on April 6, 2026, as they flew around the Moon. As the astronauts flew over the Moon’s far side, the crew photographed and described terrain features including impact craters, ancient lava flows, and surface cracks and ridges formed as the Moon slowly evolved over time. They also noted differences in color, brightness and texture, which provide clues that help scientists understand the composition and history of the lunar surface.

The image is reminiscent of the iconic Earthrise image taken by astronaut Bill Anders 58 years earlier as the Apollo 8 crew flew around the Moon. The Apollo 8 mission was the first crewed spacecraft to circumnavigate the Moon.

For more imagery from the mission, visit our Artemis II Multimedia Page.
 Image Credit NASA, Artemis II mission around the Moon
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Jason Hutt
@jthutt.bsky.social
about 12 hours ago
Get to continue my own little personal Artemis II victory tour, heading to Mass. to see college friends & some family, then visiting Pinnacles & Redwoods, then picking up my middle daughter from college in Raleigh, NC. Still feels very surreal to have Artemis II in the rear view mirror
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Don Davis
@ddavisspaceart.bsky.social
about 17 hours ago
An external view of Artemis II during its passage over the Lunar farside. Cropped from a hemispheric animation reconstructing the perspective, angular diameters etc when viewed from the middle of the dome. The spacecraft orientation is based on telemetry driven real time graphics shown at the time.
 This is a cropped still image from an animation of the Artemis II spacecraft at the time Earth disappears behind the Moon. I have used textured models of the Moon, Earth and celestial sphere etc adjusted to match the view at the time. The spacecraft orientation is based on the real time NASA visualization then. Minor parts of the spacecraft, and Earth, are textured based on mission photography.
 The soft glow of the Zodiacal Light shines in the right background. The observations and photos of this dim but large dust feature made by the crew prompted a revision in my 'Zodiacal Light model', actually a transparency texture used in an encircling 'band'.
 Over the decades I have made and refined a largely hand painted immersive 'sky texture' and many Planetary and astronomical object texture maps for use in Planetarium show productions.
 When seen uncropped and projected in a dome, this animation reasonably replicates the view one would have near the spacecraft at this time in the mission with the Moon, stars etc proportionately displayed in their true angular diameters, at least from the middle of the Planetarium. 

  #Sciart
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Alec Griffiths
@alectrospace1.bsky.social
about 8 hours ago
I was going through some of my old KSP screenshots, and I came across these three. This was my first flyby of the Mün way back in October of 2019. The view is surprisingly similar to what the crew of Artemis II saw during their lunar flyby!
A rocket plane flies past the Mün, with the crescent planet Kerbin in the background.
A view from inside the cockpit of the rocket plane, with the Mün and Kerbin visible, along with a lot of stars. The plane's control panels glow an eerie green color.
Another view inside the cockpit of the rocket plane. Now the yellowish sun can be seen, as well as the Mün and Kerbin. The plane's controls glow green.
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RadioKate
@radiokate.com
about 4 hours ago
Good morning! How are you feeling? I’m wondering ‘what next?’ after the Artemis II excitement. Was meant to be teaching a space academy course in Dubai, but… FCDO advice says no! #StayBright
Sort of tiger/cat street art where the animal is painted to look like it’s covered in orange white bandages with blackness inbetween them
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Graze Social
@graze.social
5 months ago
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Association of Space Explorers
@aseastronauts.bsky.social
about 21 hours ago
"With the Moon and the Earth, you're viewing them from this new perspective. ... We're all kind of struck by these things that make us feel small, and the sense I had was this sense of fragility and feeling ... small and powerless, but yet powerful together." –Jeremy Hansen #ArtemisII #EarthWeek2026
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