How calm, cool, and utterly chill is the crew of NASA’s first Moon mission in more than half a century?
Let’s start with Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
“You know me, personally, I hope to take a very short nap on the pad,” he said. “There’s enough time built in there to have a nap. I’ve been practicing falling asleep. So if the loops are quiet enough, and I get a minute, I’ll try for a nap.”
Imagine that. Hansen will be seated atop a Brobdingnagian rocket, fueled with explosive liquid hydrogen and oxygen, just about to blast off on a wild ride that will ultimately carry him and three other crew members out to the Moon and back. Perhaps a billion people around the world will be watching.
And there he’ll be, trying to catch a few winks.
That Hansen is contemplating a nap on the launch pad of the Artemis II mission underscores just how frenetic the opening day of this mission will be as the astronauts test out the Orion spacecraft to ensure it is indeed ready to fly them to the Moon. It will be a super-busy, high-stress time, during which everything must go right or they’ll have to come straight back to Earth. So yes, maybe the crew should grab some sleep when they can.
To understand their activities in space on that first day, Ars spoke with each of the four crew members—Hansen, alongside Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Payload Specialist Christina Koch—about their duties during this stretch. Here is the mission in their own words.
Liftoff
Glover: Launch comes after you’ve been awake for seven hours, and your brain is going in a bunch of different places, right? And so you’ve already worked a full day, and then you go do, like, the most energetic thing you’ve ever done in your life.
Liftoff of the Artemis II mission is presently scheduled for no earlier than February 5, 2026. If the rocket, spacecraft, and weather are good, the mission will launch at 8:09 pm ET. On this timeline, the crew would wake up at about 1 pm and receive a weather briefing before being suited up. About three hours before liftoff, they will clamber into the Orion spacecraft and strap into four seats. At this point, Hansen and maybe one or two of the other crew members will attempt to sleep for a few minutes, given the work ahead.

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