
Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Graphic Artist Kim Keller with one of the eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The new logos were installed in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Graphic Artist Kim Keller with one of the eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The new logos were installed in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

NASA’s mobile launcher 2 team, led by contractor Bechtel National Inc., integrated Module 7 onto the mobile launcher under construction near the Vehicle Assembly Building at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday, April 23, 2025. Each module is 40 feet tall and once complete will rise to 390 feet to provide ground support to launch for the SLS (Space Launch System) Block 1B variant rocket during launch of the Artemis IV mission.

Graphic Artist Kim Keller carries up the eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) for installation on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The new logos were installed in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. The Vehicle Assembly Building, in back, is where NASA's Space Launch System and Orion Spacecraft are currently stacked and being prepared to roll out on top of the crawler to Launch Pad 39B for the first time.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. The Vehicle Assembly Building, in back, is where NASA's Space Launch System and Orion Spacecraft are currently stacked and being prepared to roll out on top of the crawler to Launch Pad 39B for the first time.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.

NASA’s mobile launcher 2 team, led by contractor Bechtel National Inc., integrated Module 7 onto the mobile launcher under construction near the Vehicle Assembly Building at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday, April 23, 2025. Each module is 40 feet tall and once complete will rise to 390 feet to provide ground support to launch for the SLS (Space Launch System) Block 1B variant rocket during launch of the Artemis IV mission.

Eight new NASA Artemis logos (four large, four small) were installed on Crawler-Transporter 2 at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the upcoming launch of Artemis I. Named after the twin sister of Apollo, Artemis is the Goddess of the Moon. The Artemis missions will take humanity back to the Moon and beyond, beginning a new legacy of deep space exploration.