For 53 years, since the end of the Apollo program, humans have only felt the pull of the Earth’s gravity.
That’s expected to change in the coming weeks.
For the first time since December 1972, when Apollo 17 left the lunar surface, humans will instead feel the pull of the moon’s gravity. NASA’s Artemis II mission plans to orbit the moon and take four astronauts farther from the Earth than humans have ever been before.
The Johnson Space Center in Houston will once again play a crucial role in the process as a team of flight directors in mission control will guide Artemis II from its launch in Florida to its splash down off the coast of California.
“The Johnson Space Center is crucial for any aspect of this particular mission,” said David Alexander, director of Rice University’s Space Institute. “The astronauts are all trained here. They all go through the training that they do to allow them to do all the tasks that they need to do flawlessly and to keep everything safe and working. That all happens at Johnson Space Center mission control, where they’re actually controlling operations, testing out the systems, talking the astronauts through anything they need to talk to.”















