2026-04-13
23 分钟Integrity about to complete a journey spanning 694,481 miles from its launch from the Kennedy Space Center back
on April 1st, and a trip around the moon.
For Scientific American Science Quickly, I'm Kendra Pure Lewis, in for Rachel Feltman.
For a weekly science news roundup, you're listening to a special space episode.
Flashdown confirmed at 7.07 p.m. Central Time, 5.07 p.m. Pacific Time.
From the pages of Jules Verne to a modern-day mission to the moon,
a new chapter of the exploration of our celestial neighbor is complete.
Integrity's astronauts back on Earth.
A perfect bullseye splashdown for Integrity and its four astronauts.
That 's the crew of the historic Artemis II mission splashing down in the Pacific Ocean
off the coast of San Diego last Friday.
Although the mission is over, NASA's moon ambitions are far from finished.
But why?
Here to tackle that question is a group of SIAM staffers, Lee Billings, Claire Cameron, Emma Gomez, and Joe Howlett.
Hi, everyone.
Excited to talk.
Happy to be here.
I'm thrilled.
Thanks, Kendra.
Okay, so just so we know, can you rank from a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being.