OTTAWA, ONTARIO — On their record-setting journey around the moon and back, the Artemis II astronauts experienced awe that remains hard to put into words, the team said at a recent public appearance in Canada. One of the crew’s most memorable mission moments was watching the sun disappear behind the moon for 53 minutes on April 6, marking a unique solar eclipse visible only from space. NASA ’s Reid Wiseman, however, wasn't initially focused on the celestial sight. He had his responsibilities on his mind. But the commander of the moon mission noticed his crew was distracted. "Very quickly, I heard gasps. I heard, 'Oh my God.' I heard, 'I can't believe this.'" Wiseman diligently kept working behind the camera, but once he finished, NASA pilot Victor Glover invited him to the docking tunnel. Wiseman floated there and looked through the window. The sight, captured in photography, is spectacular — the three-dimensional moon curving like a ghost ship, backdropped by a gorgeous solar corona.…