SpaceX, Boeing and Lockheed prepare future hardware for NASA’s Artemis moon program

The Artemis I unmanned lunar rocket at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (AFP)
The Artemis I unmanned lunar rocket at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (AFP)

Summary

  • NASA is planning to launch the first Artemis mission next month, but is working with companies to get vehicles in place for other flights

Companies behind NASA’s Artemis moon program—including SpaceX, Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp.—are working on future missions as the agency prepares to try to get its first lunar rocket off the ground next month.

Artemis is the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s effort to return astronauts to the surface of the moon for the first time since 1972, among other goals, using several space vehicles developed by a gaggle of large aerospace companies and smaller suppliers.

Under Artemis, NASA is planning a series of missions using Space Launch System rockets to blast Orion spacecraft to orbit the moon. The agency is planning to blast off the first SLS rocket for the inaugural Artemis next month after two previous efforts were called off because of technical problems.

Lockheed Martin said last week that NASA ordered three more of the Orion spaceship it has developed, and the agency plans to use them for the sixth through eighth Artemis missions. The latest order amounted to about $2 billion, according to Lockheed, which is now building Orions for the second through fifth Artemis flights.

Boeing is also working on hardware for SLS vehicles slated for those missions, according to a spokeswoman. A joint venture between Boeing and Northrop Grumman Corp., meanwhile, is in line to win a NASA contract to build at least five more Space Launch System rockets for future launches, according to a recent procurement document from the agency.

NASA proposed to award the contract to the Boeing-Northrop venture in part because of the companies’ knowledge about how to manufacture SLS rockets, according to the agency’s procurement document. Boeing’s responsibilities for SLS include building the main part of the rocket, which contains huge tanks for fuel. Northrop has created the boosters installed on the rocket that are designed to provide a powerful lift during the initial stage of a flight.

On Monday, a SpaceX executive said the company has been working on a series of ground tests that would precede the first orbital test flight of its Starship launch vehicle, a version of which NASA wants to use for the third Artemis mission. The vehicle’s role in that flight, currently slated for 2025, would be to transport two astronauts down to the surface of the moon after taking them on board from Orion.

Jessica Jensen, a Space Exploration Technologies Corp. vice president, said at an industry event that the company plans to first launch its own Starlink satellites using Starship as it works to deliver a vehicle capable of transporting NASA astronauts to the moon’s surface.

That move would allow the company to “incrementally build up the capabilities that it takes [to] safely land humans on the moon," she said.

The Elon Musk-led company hasn’t conducted an orbital test flight of Starship yet, a flight that Mr. Musk has said is one of his priorities.

NASA earlier this month said it would try again to blast off the first SLS rocket on Nov. 14, with a launch window opening that day at 12:07 a.m. ET. The agency also said it could potentially try for the launch on Nov. 16 and Nov. 19.

NASA already has hardware in hand through the fifth Artemis mission, Jim Free, associate administrator for exploration systems development, said at the space industry event.

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text

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