Ju.putty PDocsScience & Space
Related
Ann Leckie's New Sci-Fi Novel 'Radiant Star' Earns Immediate Praise for Underground World-BuildingNew Computer Modeling Reveals Fuel-Efficient Route to the MoonAdvancing Collaborative Robotics with Agentic AI: Insights from Johns Hopkins APLEurope's Copernicus Radar Constellation Complete: Sentinel-1D Now OperationalDecoding AI Reasoning: The Role of Test-Time Compute'Slither' at 20: 10 Reasons Why This Alien Worm Comedy-Horror Marked James Gunn's Rise to FameThe Exodus of Educators: Unpacking the Reasons Behind the Growing Teacher ShortageThe Gentlemen Ransomware Group’s Internal Database Leak Exposes Admin and Affiliate Operations

Green Bank Telescope Resolves Artemis 2 Astronauts as Four Pixels During Lunar Flyby

Last updated: 2026-05-17 12:25:17 · Science & Space

A giant radio telescope in West Virginia has captured unprecedented images of the Artemis 2 Orion spacecraft as it flew around the Moon, resolving the four astronauts aboard as just four pixels.

The Green Bank Telescope (GBT) tracked Orion for five days, gathering precise measurements of its trajectory. 'There are four people in those pixels,' said Dr. Sarah Johnson, GBT deputy director, in a statement. 'This is a remarkable engineering feat.'

Background

The GBT is the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope, with a 100-meter dish located in the National Radio Quiet Zone. It is operated by the Green Bank Observatory.

Green Bank Telescope Resolves Artemis 2 Astronauts as Four Pixels During Lunar Flyby
Source: www.space.com

During the Artemis 2 mission, the telescope was used to conduct radar observations of Orion as it circled the Moon. The data helps refine navigation techniques for future deep-space travel.

Green Bank Telescope Resolves Artemis 2 Astronauts as Four Pixels During Lunar Flyby
Source: www.space.com

What This Means

The ability to image a crewed spacecraft at lunar distances demonstrates the telescope's sensitivity. It also highlights the growing role of ground-based observatories in supporting human spaceflight.

'This shows we can track and even see humans on a spacecraft more than 230,000 miles away,' added Johnson. 'It's a powerful tool for mission assurance.'

Future Artemis missions may rely on such Earth-based tracking to supplement onboard systems. Scientists are also studying the radar reflections to improve spacecraft design.