Artemis II astronaut tells Trump what communication blackout was like: 'I said a little prayer'
The Artemis II cew literally went where no man, or woman, had gone before on a historic trek around the dark side of the moon on Monday, and the crew...
By Fox News · Fox News
The Artemis II cew literally went where no man, or woman, had gone before on a historic trek around the dark side of the moon on Monday, and the crew did it with pilot Victor Glover making a quick request for divine assistance. "I'd like to ask, what was your feeling when you had no communication?" President Donald Trump asked in a call arranged by NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman from Houston mission control to "Integrity," the crew's chosen name for the Orion capsule. "Zero communication all of a sudden: It was cut off by obviously your very special location; what was your feeling when you had no communication? A little bit different, perhaps." "Yes, Mr. President, it was," Glover replied. "I said a little prayer, but then I had to keep rolling." The prayer was quick, because when things went dark, the crew had to get to work during the 45-minute communications outage. NASA'S ARTEMIS II CREW COMMITS TO MOON TRAJECTORY AFTER CRITICAL BURN SENDS ORION INTO DEEP SPACE "I was actually recording scientific observations of the far side of the moon ," Glover continued. "You know, that is actually the time when we were the farthest and the closest to the moon. "And so we were really able to make some of our most detailed observations of the far side of the moon up close. And so we were busy up here working really hard. And I must say it was actually quite nice." NASA CHIEF JARED ISAACMAN SAYS ARTEMIS II WOULD NOT BE POSSIBLE 'IF IT WASN'T FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP' Trump drilled down on the observations. "Did you see a difference, a big difference between the far side of the moon and the near side of the moon?" Trump asked. "Was there a difference in feel or difference in look, what did you see?" The lack of light "certainly did" change the perspective, Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen said, noting the far side looked strikingly different from the near side, with far fewer of the dark plains visible from Earth. GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND: AMERICA'S SPACE EDGE IS AT STAKE AS ARTEM…