The long-awaited launch of NASA‘s Artemis II mission dominated science news this week, with the excitement peaking Wednesday (April 1) as the space agency’s first crewed mission to the moon in over 50 years blasted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Millions tuned in around the world as the towering Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule rose off the launchpad at Kennedy Space Center at 6:35 p.m. EDT. Live Science covered the launch live, with reporters following the action both remotely and directly from Florida’s Space Coast.

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Back in the realm of Earthbound science, chemists have discovered a method to turn breadcrumbs into hydrogen for use in chemical manufacturing. Archaeologists found the world’s oldest evidence of gambling in the form of dice invented by Indigenous people in the western U.S. more than 12,000 years ago. Another archaeological discovery out of Vietnam may challenge the presumed history of syphilis. And a new study suggests that quantum computers don’t need to be nearly as powerful as we thought to break the world’s most secure encryption algorithms.

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Jesse Steinmetz tackles the question of what a suddenly sunless Earth might be like and which organisms might survive in such a cold, dark place.

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China launched an effort to clean up its air in 2013, and in the decade or so since, the country has lowered its sulfate aerosol emissions by about 75%. A new study took a look at the global impact of that impressive feat, showing that the loss of smog over China likely spared the Arctic from sea-ice-damaging cyclones. The smog previously detoured storms across the North Pacific, funneling them into the Arctic, where they would destroy ice in the Bering Sea.

However, it’s not all good news: Aerosols cool the planet, so their disappearance can ultimately unmask greenhouse-gas-driven warming that was once offset by pollution’s cooling effect. In short, it’s a complicated picture that will take more research to fully understand.

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sun having recently passed its peak in activity, called solar maximum, could the four-person crew face even more risk from radiation than they would otherwise?

To unpack the effects of space weather on the human body, Live Science trending news writer Patrick Pester spoke with Patricia Reiff, a professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University in Houston. Counterintuitively, she explained that solar maximum may be a better time for the Artemis II mission than you might assume.

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If you couldn’t watch the Artemis II launch live Wednesday, don’t fret! NASA’s coverage of the event can be found on the agency’s YouTube channel. (And for detailed explanations of the science you’re seeing, check out Live Science’s live coverage.)

Besides witnessing the epic moment of liftoff, you can learn about NASA astronaut’s wide array of prelaunch rituals, the menus the crew will tuck into on their venture, and the mission’s official mascot, Rise, designed by 8-year-old Lucas Ye of California. The coverage also digs into all the details of how the Artemis II mission will proceed now that the astronauts have exited Earth’s atmosphere.

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