
NASA revamps Artemis moon landing program to reduce flight gaps and risk
ABC News
NASA is revamping its Artemis moon landing program
NASA said Friday it’s adding an extra moon mission by Artemis astronauts before attempting a high-risk lunar landing with a crew.
The shake-up in the flight lineup and push for a faster pace came just two days after NASA’s new moon rocket returned to its hangar for more repairs and a safety panel warned the space agency to scale back its overly ambitious goals for humanity’s first lunar landing in more than half a century.
Artemis II — a lunar fly-around by four astronauts — is off until at least April because of rocket problems.
The follow-up mission — Artemis III — had been targeting a landing near the moon’s south pole by another pair of astronauts a year or two later. But with long gaps between flights and concern growing over the readiness of a lunar lander and moonwalking suits, NASA’s new administrator Jared Isaacman announced that mission would instead focus on launching a lunar lander into orbit around Earth for docking practice by Orion capsule astronauts in 2027.
The new plan calls for a moon landing — potentially even two moon landings — by astronauts in 2028.













