Behind The Moon: Artemis II Went Silent For 40 Minutes

The Moon physically blocked radio and laser signals, leaving the astronauts completely out of reach.

Update: 2026-04-07 12:20 GMT

Ever wondered what it feels like for a spacecraft to completely lose contact with Earth? No voices. No signals. Just silence. During the Artemis II mission, there was a moment when this became real. As the spacecraft moved behind the Moon, all communication with Earth suddenly cut off for about 40 minutes. This wasn’t a glitch. It was unavoidable.

The Moon physically blocked radio and laser signals, leaving the astronauts completely out of reach. No contact with NASA, no reassurance from mission control, just the crew, alone in deep space. Inside the spacecraft, everything continued as planned. The astronauts carried on with lunar observations, taking images, studying the surface, and focusing entirely on the Moon.

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This kind of silence isn’t new. During Apollo 11, astronaut Michael Collins experienced something similar, describing it as feeling “truly alone” yet surprisingly peaceful. Back on Earth, though, those 40 minutes were tense. Teams tracking the spacecraft could only wait, watching for the signal to return.

Because when it did, it meant everything was still on track. And in that moment, the silence broke, and Earth finally heard from them again. And in the midst of this historic flight, the Artemis II crew also set a new record as the farthest humans have ever travelled from Earth, surpassing a milestone that stood since 1970.

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Writer - അഖിൽ തോമസ്

Web Journalist, MediaOne

Editor - അഖിൽ തോമസ്

Web Journalist, MediaOne

By - Web Desk

contributor

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