NASA, Artemis and moon
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NASA has postponed Artemis III until at least late 2027 and redefined it from a lunar landing to a low-Earth orbit test of human landing systems. The change is part of a broader restructuring of the Artemis program to maintain a 2028 moon landing target ...
NASA says testing progress ‘underscores continued confidence’ that the spacesuits will be ready to support the lunar landing
The Artemis program was officially named and announced by NASA in May 2019, when Artemis III was intended to land “the first woman and next man” on the lunar South Pole in 2024. Since then, the uncrewed Artemis I test flight launched in 2022, and Artemis II is complete.
NASA’s Artemis programme has adjusted timelines, with Artemis III now planned for 2027 as an Earth-orbit docking test with commercial lunar landers before any crewed surface attempt. Achieving the 2028 Moon landing goal depends on SpaceX and Blue Origin ...
NASA’s plan to use new space suits for its anticipated 2028 moon landing mission is in jeopardy, according to a new report issued by the agency’s Office of Inspector General (OIG), an independent
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket experienced a payload deployment failure, impacting its ability to place a satellite into the correct orbit. While not directly affecting NASA's immediate Artemis III mission,
The astronauts were flown by helicopter to the USS John P. Murtha for medical checks after splash down on Friday evening.
The next U.S. trip to the Moon isn’t about planting a flag. It’s about learning how to live and work there. NASA has just reset its Artemis program, marking a clear strategic shift: Space exploration is moving away from a race to achieve milestones and ...