Here's your feel good news for the day my friends in the middle of this dumpster fire we call Twitter.
The Artemis II crew broke the spaceflight record for the farthest humans have ever been from Earth,
and then, they did something truly amazing
The crew proposed naming a crater after mission commander Reid Wiseman's late wife, Carroll Taylor Wiseman, who died of cancer in 2020.
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen made the radio call, audibly emotional, saying
"We lost a loved one, her name was Carroll, the spouse of Reid, the mother of Katey and Ellie... it's a bright spot on the moon, and we would like to call it Carroll."
Wiseman put a hand on Hansen's shoulder,
Christina Koch wiped tears from her eyes,
and all four broke into a group hug
while mission control observed nearly a full minute of silence before responding:
"Integrity and Carroll Crater, loud and clear."
The part that makes this even better,
Reid Wiseman later revealed that his three crewmates came up with the idea themselves and approached him about it.
"That was an emotional moment for me, and I just thought that was just a total treasure that they had thought through this and they had offered this,"
The crater sits just on the nearside of the near/far boundary,
meaning at certain times during the moon's transit
it is actually visible from Earth.
Carroll was a pediatric nurse practitioner and NICU nurse
who died in May 2020
after a five-year battle with cancer.
The name still has to be formally approved by the International Astronomical Union, as a precedent, Jim Lovell proposed naming a mountain "Mount Marilyn" after his wife on Apollo 8 in 1968, but IAU didn't formally approve it until 2017.
So "Carroll Crater" will be official for decades
before it's "officially" official.