2026年4月8日 / 美国东部时间下午5:31 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
在本周完成具有历史意义的绕月飞行后,阿尔忒弥斯二号任务机组人员正返回地球,美国宇航局(NASA)公布了宇航员们备受期待的晨间歌单。
“你们要的歌单来了,”NASA周三在社交媒体上写道,并通过Spotify分享了这份歌单。“每首曲目都由月球机组人员挑选,延续了50多年前就开始的传统。敬请关注他们接下来会选择哪些歌曲。”
目前的八首歌单包括:
- 《Sleepyhead》——Young & Sick
- 《Green Light(feat. André 3000)》——约翰·传奇与安德烈·3000
- 《In a Daydream》——Freddy Jones Band
- 《Pink Pony Club》——查普尔·罗恩
- 《Working Class Heroes (Work)》——西洛·格林
- 《Good Morning》——曼迪萨与托比·麦克
- 《Tokyo Drifting》——玻璃动物乐队与登泽尔·柯里
- 《Under Pressure》——皇后乐队与大卫·鲍伊
阿尔忒弥斯二号任务指挥官里德·怀斯曼、维克多·格洛弗、克里斯蒂娜·科赫以及加拿大宇航员杰里米·汉森于4月1日发射升空,开启为期10天的登月任务。本周早些时候,他们完成了月球飞越,成为半个多世纪以来首批绕月飞行的宇航员。机组人员拍摄了地球、月球背面以及太空日食的绝美照片。
2026年4月6日,阿尔忒弥斯二号机组人员绕月飞行期间,通过猎户座飞船舷窗拍摄的地球日落景象。NASA
这些宇航员是首批亲眼在白昼中看到大片月球背面的人类,他们也创下了人类离地球最远的飞行纪录,最远达到距地球252756英里。
机组人员每天都是伴着音乐醒来的——周三播放的是《Under Pressure》——这一传统延续自此前的阿波罗任务。
美国宇航局为何用音乐作为起床铃声?
2015年,NASA历史部门的科林·弗里斯整理了一份起床铃声的编年记录。
“众所周知,人们一直对飞行项目和任务活动充满好奇,而关于太空起床铃声和播放音乐的询问从未间断(双关语)!”他写道。
在他的编年记录中,弗里斯引用了时任NASA国会关系代理助理管理员林恩·W·亨宁格1990年致一位议员的信件,信中亨宁格写道:“在太空任务中用音乐唤醒宇航员的传统至少可以追溯到阿波罗计划,当时从月球返回的宇航员会被任务控制中心的同事用贴合当时情境的流行歌曲歌词致意。”
“所有这些选曲的共同之处在于,它们能增进宇航员和地面支持人员之间的情谊与团队精神。事实上,这就是设置起床音乐的唯一原因;也正因如此,NASA管理层既没有试图规定曲目内容,也没有允许外部利益干预选曲流程,”亨宁格在给伊利诺伊州众议员罗伯特·H·米歇尔的信中写道。
过往机组的起床曲目有哪些?
1969年阿波罗10号任务机组的起床曲目包括托尼·班奈特的《The Best Is Yet To Come》和弗兰克·辛纳屈的《It’s Nice to Go Trav’ling》,阿波罗10号唤醒任务控制中心时使用的是《Come Fly With Me》。
1971年的阿波罗15号任务颇具幽默感,选用了《2001太空漫游》的主题曲。
阿尔忒弥斯二号机组在太空的最后一天会听到哪首歌?
NASA尚未公布,但过去有几支机组在太空的最后一天听到的是迪恩·马丁的热门歌曲《Going Back to Houston》。
阿尔忒弥斯二号机组的太空任务最后一天为周五,届时猎户座飞船舱预计将在加利福尼亚州圣地亚哥附近海域溅落。
NASA drops Artemis II moon mission playlist. These are the astronauts’ wake-up songs.
April 8, 2026 / 5:31 PM EDT / CBS News
As the Artemis II mission crew heads back toward Earth following a history-making trip around the moon this week, NASA dropped the astronauts’ highly anticipated morning playlist.
“You asked for it. Here it is,” NASA wrote Wednesday on social media, sharing the list via Spotify. “Each track was selected by the Moon crew, continuing a tradition that started more than 50 years ago. Stay tuned to find out which songs they’ll choose next.”
The current eight-song list includes:
- “Sleepyhead” by Young & Sick
- “Green Light (feat. André 3000)” by John Legend and André 3000
- “In a Daydream” by Freddy Jones Band
- “Pink Pony Club” by Chappell Roan
- “Working Class Heroes (Work)” by CeeLo Green
- “Good Morning” by Mandisa and TobyMac
- “Tokyo Drifting” by Glass Animals and Denzel Curry
- “Under Pressure” by Queen and David Bowie
Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen were launched into space on April 1 for their 10-day moon mission. Earlier this week, they completed a lunar flyby, becoming the first astronauts to loop around the moon in more than half a century. The crew captured stunning photos of Earth, the far side of the moon and an eclipse in space.
Earthset captured through the Orion spacecraft window on April 6, 2026, during the Artemis II crew’s flyby of the Moon. NASA
The astronauts are the first humans to have seen with their own eyes large swaths of the far side of the moon in daylight, and they traveled farther from Earth than any humans in history, reaching a maximum distance from Earth of 252,756 miles.
The crew has woken up to music each day — “Under Pressure” played Wednesday — which is a tradition held over from previous Apollo missions.
Why does NASA use music for wake-up calls?
In 2015, Colin Fries of the NASA History Division compiled a chronology of wake-up calls.
“There have always been inquiries about flown items and mission events as we all know, and those about wakeup calls and music played in space encompassed a steady stream (no pun intended)!” he wrote.
In his chronology, Fries referenced a letter from Lynn W. Heninger, then NASA’s acting assistant administrator for congressional relations, to a lawmaker in 1990 in which Heninger wrote: “Use of music to awaken astronauts on space missions dates back at least to the Apollo Program, when astronauts returning from the Moon were serenaded by their colleagues in mission control with lyrics from popular songs that seemed appropriate to the occasion.”
“The common element of all these selections is that they promote a sense of camaraderie and esprit de corps among the astronauts and ground support personnel. That, in fact, is the sole reason for having wake-up music; and it is the reason that NASA management has neither attempted to dictate its content nor allowed outside interests to influence the process,” Heninger wrote to Illinois Rep. Robert H. Michel.
What are past crews’ wake-up songs?
The Apollo 10 mission crew’s wake-up songs in 1969 included “The Best Is Yet To Come” by Tony Bennett and “It’s Nice to Go Trav’ling” by Frank Sinatra, and “Come Fly With Me” when Apollo 10 woke up Mission Control.
The Apollo 15 mission in 1971 had a sense of humor, selecting the theme song from “2001: A Space Odyssey.”
What song will the Artemis II crew wake up to on their final day in space?
NASA hasn’t said just yet, but in the past, several crews have woken up on their final day in space to Dean Martin’s popular song “Going Back to Houston.”
The Artemis II crew’s final day in space is Friday, when the Orion capsule is expected to splash down off the California coast near San Diego.
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