Artemis, NASA
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Starlust on MSN
MoonFall—spiritual successor to Ingenuity Mars helicopter—will scout for Artemis landing sites in lunar South Pole
"We're going to marry our success from Ingenuity, all that knowledge, all that skill and success, and couple that with an industry capability. We're going to get this done."
NASA has released a 'Moon Base User's Guide' that reveals the major gaps the agency and its partners must fill in to land and live on the moon.
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.
Morning Overview on MSN
NASA says Artemis moon landing remains on track for 2028 despite suit delays
NASA still plans to put astronauts on the lunar surface by early 2028, but the path to get there now includes an extra mission and a growing list of unresolved risks, chief among them whether the spacesuits they’ll need will be ready in time.
NASA says testing progress ‘underscores continued confidence’ that the spacesuits will be ready to support the lunar landing
Experts say building a lunar colony within the next decade, as NASA and Elon Musk want to, will require finding solutions to problems we don't yet fully understand.
President Trump signals a potential Moon landing by 2028 as he meets the Artemis 2 crew, balancing ambitious political timelines with NASA’s deep-space engineering.
NASA remains committed to its 2028 Moon landing goal under the Artemis program, despite a new report warning of delays.
During most of the Artemis II mission, the crew of four astronauts beamed back low-definition video, both from inside the spacecraft and from exterior views of the Moon. It was exhilarating stuff, but in a world in which we’re all watching HDTVs, it also felt a little flat.
By Joey Roulette COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado, April 14 (Reuters) - After the safe return of four astronauts from a historic flyby of the moon last week, NASA is shifting focus to its next challenge: putting competing lunar landers from Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin through a series of rigorous tests ahead of future crewed landings.
ASU researchers are helping shape NASA’s Artemis missions as the agency prepares for its next Moon landing with Artemis III.