BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Artemis II on track for 2024

The first woman should set foot on the Moon the following year

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NASA is on track to put the first woman on the Moon within the next few years, after a review of the initial Artemis I mission found no major issues.

The uncrewed Artemis I launched on 16 November and, after several scrubbed launch attempts, proved extremely successful. NASA carefully examined the Orion crew capsule and discovered one of the few problems: the capsule’s heat shield had not ablated as predicted, although there was still margin for error.

NASA is confident it can remedy several other minor snags and stay on track to launch the first crewed test, Artemis II, in November 2024. At the end of March, the five core stages of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket were connected together and are due to be shipped to the Kennedy Space Center this summer. Around the same time, the Orion crew and service modules will be joined together ready to be stacked with the SLS in the first quarter of 2024.

If all goes well on that test flight, the first landing mission, Artemis III, should follow around a year afterwards. However, this timeline depends on the private companies which are providing several key systems also progressin­g on time. Among these is the Starship Human Landing System (HLS) from SpaceX, which will rendezvous with Orion en route to the Moon then carry the crew to the lunar surface. The first test flight of the Starship system is expected this April.

Once on the surface, the crew will rely on new spacesuits under developmen­t by Axiom Space, which were debuted this March. These are designed to be more comfortabl­e and flexible, and accommodat­e a broader range of body shapes than existing suits. “Axiom’s next generation spacesuits will not only enable the first woman to walk on the Moon, but they will also open opportunit­ies for more people to explore and conduct science on the Moon than ever before,” says NASA administra­tor Bill Nelson. www.nasa.gov/artemispro­gram

 ?? ?? ▲ Plans are coming together, with the rocket stages now connected and the debut of new comfy spacesuits
▲ Plans are coming together, with the rocket stages now connected and the debut of new comfy spacesuits

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