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Why did NASA delayed mission to take humans back to Moon until 2025?

Artemis IV, the first mission to the Gateway lunar space station, remains on track for 2028. The first mission, Artemis II, was supposed to take place later this year but has been delayed now.

Edited By: Saumya Nigam @snigam04 Washington Published : Jan 10, 2024 14:35 IST, Updated : Jan 10, 2024 14:35 IST
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Image Source : NASA Why did NASA delayed mission to take humans back to Moon until 2025?

The scheduled manned Artemis mission to the Moon by the US space agency has been postponed to 2025. The move has been taken to send the first woman and first person of colour to the lunar surface. NASA has rescheduled Artemis II, which is the initial crewed mission around the Moon, which was targeted for September 2025. Furthermore, Artemis III, intended to land the first astronauts near the lunar South Pole, is now slated for September 2026.

Artemis IV, the first mission to the Gateway lunar space station, remains on track for 2028. The first mission, Artemis II, was supposed to take place later this year but has been delayed now.

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement that they have learned a lot since Artemis I and the success of these early missions relies on “our commercial and international partnerships to further our reach and understanding of humanity’s place in our solar system”.

Nelson further said, “Artemis represents what we can accomplish as a nation - and as a global coalition. When we set our sights on what is hard, together, we can achieve what is great.” 

The space agency said that ensuring crew safety is the primary driver for the Artemis II schedule changes.

“As the first Artemis flight test with crew aboard the Orion spacecraft, the mission will test critical environmental control and life support systems required to support astronauts,” said NASA.

NASA’s investigation into the unexpected loss of char layer pieces from the spacecraft’s heat shield during Artemis I is expected to conclude this spring.

The new timeline for Artemis III, said NASA, aligns with the updated schedule for Artemis II, which ensures the agency can incorporate lessons learned from Artemis II into the next mission and acknowledges development challenges experienced by NASA’s industry partners.

“We are letting the hardware talk to us so that crew safety drives our decision-making. We will use the Artemis II flight test, and each flight that follows, to reduce risk for future Moon missions,” said Catherine Koerner, associate administrator, of the Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

NASA said that it has asked both Artemis human landing system providers - Blue Origin and SpaceX - to begin applying knowledge gained in developing their systems as part of their existing contracts toward future variations to potentially deliver large cargo on later missions.

Amit Kshatriya, manager of NASA’s Moon to Mars Program Office said, “Artemis is a long-term exploration campaign to conduct science at the Moon with astronauts and prepare for future human missions to Mars. That means we must get it right as we develop and fly our foundational systems so that we can safely carry out these missions."

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Inputs from IANS

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