Multiple cameras and science instruments were set up close to the launch, where humans weren’t allowed to be. | NASA/Aubrey GemignanArtemis II blasted off yesterday on a historic mission that sees humans return to the Moon’s vicinity for the first time in over 50 years.
The enormous Space Launch System rocket that got the four astronauts off the ground is a whopping 322-foot-tall. Naturally, there were cameras galore to capture the event, including many NASA photographers.
The SLS rocket shortly before blastoff. | NASA/Joel Kowsky
NASA/Bill Ingalls
NASA/Joel Kowsky
NASA/Bill Ingalls
NASA/Joel Kowsky
NASA/Bill Ingalls
NASA/Aubrey Gemignani
NASA/Bill Ingalls
NASA/Keegan Barber
NASA/Keegan Barber
The Crawler Transporter 2 can be seen in the foreground as the SLS carries the Orion spacecraft to the Moon. | NASA/Bill Ingalls
NASA/Keegan Barber
NASA/Joel Kowsky
NASA/Bill IngallsSome lucky passengers on a commercial flight were perfectly positioned to capture the rocket launch, while one mathematician attending the launch managed to capture Artemis II in the reflection of her glasses.
Passengers on a commercial flight captured the launch of Artemis II on camera
The plane happened to pass near the launch trajectory at the exact moment of liftoff, giving passengers a rare view of the rocket launch right from their windows.pic.twitter.com/8Bewtm8aFg
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) April 2, 2026
Someone just caught Artemis from their flight. Cool view of little piece of history! pic.twitter.com/ngNXdB1tdg
— Aaron Burnett (@aaronburnett) April 1, 2026
Artemis II launch… caught in my glasses reflection pic.twitter.com/6Kt9RBhwt6
— Ellie Sleightholm (@elsleightholm) April 2, 2026
Meanwhile, plenty of photographers were in attendance to capture Artemis II, including PetaPixel regular Andrew McCarthy.
A reminder that humans can do incredible things when we work together with purpose. pic.twitter.com/JVbiodbE09
— Andrew McCarthy (@AJamesMcCarthy) April 2, 2026
I’m still at a loss for words pic.twitter.com/NGTT6HpN68
— Andrew McCarthy (@AJamesMcCarthy) April 1, 2026
The best is yet to come. pic.twitter.com/RNeiilNosn
— Andrew McCarthy (@AJamesMcCarthy) April 2, 2026
Artemis ii pic.twitter.com/ypo26SXcyH
— Brian ☀️🌏🌘 (@balail) April 2, 2026
— John Kraus (@johnkrausphotos) April 2, 2026
Artemis II is NASA’s first crewed mission in the Artemis program, and will see humans travel further from Earth than anyone before them — roughly 4,600 miles beyond the dark side of the Moon.
Onboard are astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen. In February, PetaPixel revealed that the crew will be using 10-year-old DSLR cameras, rather than modern mirrorless. The full-frame, 20.8-megapixel Nikon D5 was released back in 2016. Mirrorless cameras are expected to fly in future Artemis missions.






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