Monday, June 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

‘Payoff day’: Jenni Gibbons on watching Artemis II crew make lunar history

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2026 09:56 AM
  • ‘Payoff day’: Jenni Gibbons on watching Artemis II crew make lunar history

The Artemis II mission has at times left Jenni Gibbons feeling tense — and tired. 

But the sometimes bated breath and fatigue aren't hindering the Calgary-born astronaut from taking in the historic mission from deep inside a NASA control room in Houston.

"I'm truly so tired," she told The Canadian Press late Monday. "But when I wake up, I think that there's no place I would want to be other than Mission Control and following Jeremy and my other colleagues."

On Monday, fellow Canadian Jeremy Hansen and his three American crewmates — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch — looped the moon in a six-hour lunar flyby, going farther into space than any humans before, breaking a distance record set by Apollo 13.

It's a step toward landing boot prints near the moon’s south pole in just two years.

The mission is a highlight of NASA’s first return to the moon since the Apollo flights of the 1960s and '70s, and Gibbons got a second-row seat after days, weeks, months and years of planning.

"Today was the payoff day," she said. "It was an awesome experience."

Gibbons was to fly in Hansen's place in the event he couldn't. Since last week's launch on April 1, she has been a voice link from Earth to space — coaching Hansen and the other astronauts on key mission objectives.

She said inside Mission Control, moments felt particularly tense in the lead-up to — and immediately after — the Orion capsule lost the radio signal as it travelled behind the moon, entering an expected communications blackout.

"Obviously, you want all the systems to work perfectly and sometimes it just takes a little while," Gibbons said. "So, we were lucky today.

"A couple moments of tension, but overall super positive."

The four-person crew was tasked with capturing images and other geological observations of the moon. They were on their way home Tuesday, set to splash down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, Calif., on Friday.

Gibbons said she's eager to see images from the flyby and is particularly keen to see those of a total solar eclipse that the crew described as something out of "sci-fi."

She ias also curious to see a pair of fresh moon craters — one named "Integrity," after the Orion spacecraft, and the other named for Wiseman's late wife, Carroll. The commander wept as Hansen put in the request to Mission Control.

"(Reid)'s a really wonderful person who brings a lot of light, so hearing his family be honoured in that way was special," Gibbons said.

The Artemis mission is unique, she said. Those on board the capsule observed parts of the moon never before seen — something she noted remote robotic sensing just can't match. 

Findings from this mission will help shape the future of space exploration, she said.

Gibbons said she would love her own trip to space "when the time is right," but for now she's content to see Hansen through his.

"This has always felt like Jeremy's mission to me and he's a very dear friend," she said. 

"I adore him and his family and seeing him live his dream has just been such a highlight for me."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - NASA

MORE National ARTICLES

Three more recall petitions against Alberta politicians fall short

Three more recall petitions against Alberta politicians fall short
Three more recall petitions against members of Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservative caucus have failed.

Three more recall petitions against Alberta politicians fall short

The little we know about Canadian troops stationed in the Middle East

The little we know about Canadian troops stationed in the Middle East
As Ottawa refuses to say exactly how many Canadian troops are in the Middle East, experts are questioning the government's claim it has had no role in the American attack on Iran.

The little we know about Canadian troops stationed in the Middle East

Carney won't say whether India is engaged in interference, transnational repression

Carney won't say whether India is engaged in interference, transnational repression
Prime Minister Mark Carney is refusing to say whether he believes India is still behind acts of foreign interference and transnational repression in Canada.

Carney won't say whether India is engaged in interference, transnational repression

PM Carney: Canada's support for U.S. striking Iran came 'with regret'

PM Carney: Canada's support for U.S. striking Iran came 'with regret'
Four days after Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada supports the U.S. actions in Iran, he said that support comes "with regret," as they demonstrated the continued decline of the rules-based international order.

PM Carney: Canada's support for U.S. striking Iran came 'with regret'

Immigration could soon account for all of Canada's population growth: expert

Immigration could soon account for all of Canada's population growth: expert
With Canada's population growth now essentially flat, the country could be heading toward an unprecedented situation where population growth is driven entirely by immigration, one expert says.

Immigration could soon account for all of Canada's population growth: expert

Green energy orgs applaud Canada-India agreements on renewables

Green energy orgs applaud Canada-India agreements on renewables
Some of Canada's renewable energy organizations are applauding commitments Ottawa signed with India this week to advance development of solar, wind and hydrogen power.

Green energy orgs applaud Canada-India agreements on renewables