Live Mission Dashboard
Mission Elapsed Time, speed, distance from Earth and Moon, all updated every second from JPL Horizons.
Artemis Lens turns NASA's live trajectory data into a calm, cinematic mission console you can carry in your pocket. Watch the Orion spacecraft fly past the Moon in real time, then point your phone at the sky to see exactly where it is overhead.
Everything you need to follow Artemis II from launch through splashdown - presented with the clarity and craft the mission deserves.
Mission Elapsed Time, speed, distance from Earth and Moon, all updated every second from JPL Horizons.
An interactive Earth-Moon scene with Orion's true flight path, rendered from real ephemeris data. Pinch, rotate, scrub time.
Lift your phone and the camera overlay shows you exactly where Orion is overhead - even when it is impossible to see with the naked eye.
SpaceX-style timeline of every major milestone - liftoff, TLI, lunar flyby, return - with countdowns to the next event.
NASA imagery mapped to Orion's position when each photo was captured. The visual history of the mission, in context.
Dive into every mission of the Artemis program, the spacecraft, the launch vehicles, and the Moon-to-Mars roadmap. Plus a Kid Mode for younger explorers.
Restrained typography, monospaced telemetry, and a deep-space palette that lets the data breathe.
Artemis Lens started with a simple question: when humans return to the Moon for the first time in over fifty years, where exactly will they be? Live news streams are great, but we wanted something quieter and more constant - a companion that always knows where Orion is and can show you in a glance.
Every number in the app comes from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Horizons system, the same source planetariums and mission planners use. Positions, velocities, and distances are interpolated locally on your device so the dashboard stays fluid even when you are offline.
The app is for the family on the couch on launch night, the teacher who wants to bring the mission into their classroom, and the lifelong space fan who wants to know - down to the kilometer - how far Orion has travelled since liftoff. No accounts. No ads. No tracking. Just the mission.
A free-return trajectory around the far side of the Moon. Four astronauts. About ten days. The dress rehearsal for humanity's return to the lunar surface.