NASA, Artemis and Blue Moon
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After Artemis II took astronauts to lunar orbit for the first time since 1972, Nasa has released detailed plans for how it intends to establish a Moon base within the next decade. It is ambitious, to say the least,
NASA’s Artemis III mission takes a major step forward as the SLS rocket’s massive core stage arrives at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
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.
If the U.S. is ever to set up a permanent outpost on the moon, it will need nuclear power. The White House just released a road map to get it as soon as 2028
Think of it like a Google Maps for space. Unlike in 1972, you don’t have to be a high-tech agency to follow the latest lunar mission.
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Jeff Bezos’ Botched Space Launch Was So Bad It Could Threaten NASA’s Entire Moon Program
More delays could be coming. The post Jeff Bezos’ Botched Space Launch Was So Bad It Could Threaten NASA’s Entire Moon Program appeared first on Futurism.