This week we’re joined by astronomer David Reneke to unpack a landmark moment in space exploration — the successful return of NASA’s Artemis II mission after its historic crewed journey around the Moon.
For the first time in over 50 years, astronauts have travelled beyond low Earth orbit and returned safely, completing a full lunar fly-by and proving key systems needed for future Moon landings.
We break down what was achieved, what the astronauts experienced while viewing the Moon from deep space, and why Australia played an important role in tracking and deep-space communications.
We also look at the most intense phase of the mission — re-entry and ocean splashdown — where temperatures soared to extreme levels and precision recovery operations were critical to mission success.
It’s a conversation about engineering, exploration, human perspective, and what this mission now means for the next era of lunar travel.

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