NASA to push back moon mission timelines amid spacecraft delays -
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[January 09, 2024]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - NASA is set to delay its next few missions to the
moon under a key program as technical hurdles mount with the various
spacecraft it intends to use to get there, according to four people
familiar with NASA's plans.
The U.S. space agency is expected to announce the plans on Tuesday after
spending months tracking progress with contractors and considering
changes to the Artemis program, a multi-billion dollar effort that
includes returning the first astronauts to the moon since the last
Apollo mission in 1972.
NASA's second Artemis mission is expected to be pushed beyond its
planned late-2024 target after issues were uncovered with the Lockheed
Martin-built Orion crew capsule's batteries during vibration tests, two
of the people said. The batteries will need to be replaced.
This would have been the first flight with humans aboard after launching
the capsule uncrewed atop NASA's Space Launch System in a 2022 inaugural
test.
Artemis 3 - planned to be the first mission landing humans on the moon
in late 2025 using the Starship landing system from NASA contractor
SpaceX - will likewise be pushed back. Billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX is
taking longer than expected to reach certain development milestones, all
four people said.
NASA declined to comment. Lockheed and SpaceX did not immediately return
requests for comment.
Senior NASA officials in recent months have been mulling plans to move
the inaugural Artemis astronaut landing to the fourth mission, giving
SpaceX and other contractors more practice before making the first such
landing in half a century.
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Astronauts for NASA's Artemis II mission stand in front of their
Orion crew capsule, expected to carry Reid Wiseman, commander,
Victor Glover, pilot, and mission specialists Christina Hammock Koch
and Jeremy Hansen, with the Canadian Space Agency, as NASA Deputy
Administrator Pam Melroy speaks at a press conference at the Kennedy
Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., August 8, 2023.
REUTERS/Joe Skipper./File Photo
NASA officials presented that option to the agency's senior
leadership last month, but it could not be determined if it chose
that path. It was also unclear what the new target dates for the
initial Artemis missions would be.
NASA's Artemis program relies heavily on private companies. It will
use the Boeing and Northrop Grumman-led Space Launch System to loft
humans off Earth, Lockheed's Orion capsule to propel them toward the
moon and SpaceX's Starship to take them on and off the lunar
surface.
Billionaire Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin is also developing an astronaut
lander for later missions.
Complex development milestones with SpaceX's giant Starship system
include the company's plan to refuel Starship at an orbital
propellant depot before the ship can take humans to the lunar
surface and launch them back with enough fuel.
NASA is eager to see SpaceX make progress on the orbital refueling
plan, seeing it as a potential bottleneck that entails the delicate
transfer of thousands of gallons of supercooled, flammable
propellants in orbit, three of the people said.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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