NEW DELHI: Nasa is moving ahead with its Artemis III mission in Earth orbit that will carry humans after the success of the Artemis II mission. This time, the crewed flight will mainly focus on two significant aspects: rendezvous and docking capabilities between the agency’s Orion spacecraft and commercial landers from Blue Origin and SpaceX. In February, the decision was made to add an Artemis mission prior to the crewed final landing missions to the Moon’s South Pole region. According to Nasa, constant evaluation of the operational considerations for Artemis III is taking place. This evaluation ultimately aims to support a safe and risk-free landing of the next Americans on the Moon during the Artemis IV mission.
The mission directs the demonstration of critical systems needed for a future lunar landing. “While this is a mission to Earth orbit, it is an important stepping stone to successfully landing on the Moon with Artemis IV. Artemis III is one of the most complex missions NASA has undertaken,” said Jeremy Parsons, Moon to Mars acting assistant deputy administrator, NASA’s Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate in Washington.
The Space Launch System (SLS), Nasa’s super heavy rocket launcher, will send astronauts to the Moon as part of the Artemis III mission.
It will lift the Orion spacecraft, which will carry four crew members from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. After SLS delivers Orion, the spacecraft will use its European-built module, developed by the European Space Agency (ESA), to adjust and stabilise Orion’s path, placing it into a low Earth orbit.
This time, the crew will be spending more time aboard Orion compared to the Artemis II mission, while reflecting on the docking system’s performance. The mission will inform lander rendezvous and habitation concepts and mission operations in preparation for future surface missions. “For the first time, Nasa will coordinate a launch campaign involving multiple spacecraft, integrating new capabilities into Artemis operations. We’re integrating more partners and interrelated operations into this mission by design, which will help us learn how Orion, the crew, and ground teams all interact together with hardware and teams from both lander providers before we send astronauts to the Moon’s surface and build a Moon base there,” said Jeremy Parsons.