So I was just reading up about this, and I thought it was worth sharing. Essentially at the moment, NASA is preparing for its Artemis project which will see the US go back to the oon and establish a permanent moon base. While they are doing this, they have open contracts out there for private companies to deliver instruments and experiments to the moon's surface. One of those is going to launch in January 2024.
I found some more info on it here
This sounds like a great project and one that will hopefully be successful! One of the great letdowns of my lifetime is how little progress we have made in space exploration, so us having a lunar base would be awesome.
I found some more info on it here
The lunar exploration campaign will start with the uncrewed Artemis I mission and its plan to take an Orion capsule on a four-to-six-week journey to the moon and back. Artemis II will do the same with astronauts on board, then Artemis III will put two astronauts on the surface of the moon sometime after 2024.
"And by Artemis IV, the hope is higher heights," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said at an Aug. 3 news conference discussing the upcoming Artemis I mission.
The "Moon to Mars" plan involves establishing a new space station in lunar orbit and, eventually, a habitable Artemis base camp on the surface of the moon's south pole. These structures will help support more discovery and exploration of the solar system, according to NASA.
While the Artemis space missions are mainly focused on lunar exploration, NASA's long-term goals are even more ambitious. Using the technology and research developed during the Artemis space flights, NASA intends to make the next giant leap for mankind: sending astronauts on a mission to Mars.
This sounds like a great project and one that will hopefully be successful! One of the great letdowns of my lifetime is how little progress we have made in space exploration, so us having a lunar base would be awesome.