Artemis V

Fifth orbital flight of the Artemis program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Artemis V is planned to be the fourth crewed mission and second lunar landing of the NASA-led Artemis program. The mission is expected to see the first efforts by NASA to begin building a permanent Moon base. As of March 2026, launch is scheduled for late 2028.[1]

Mission typeCrewed lunar landing
OperatorNASA
Spacecraft
Manufacturer
Quick facts Mission type, Operator ...
Artemis V
Mission typeCrewed lunar landing
OperatorNASA
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft
Manufacturer
Start of mission
Launch dateLate 2028 (planned)
RocketSpace Launch System
Launch siteKennedy, LC-39B
End of mission
Landing sitePacific Ocean (planned)
Moon lander
Landing siteSouth polar region
Close

Originally, Artemis V was proposed as the program's third lunar landing mission, sending an Orion spacecraft with four astronauts to the Lunar Gateway space station, where they would install two elements, before heading down to the Lunar surface.[2]

Original Overview

Artemis V will launch four astronauts to the Lunar Gateway space station. The mission will deliver the European Space Agency's ESPRIT refueling and communications module and a Canadian-built robotic arm system for the Gateway, Canadarm3. Also delivered will be NASA's Lunar Terrain Vehicle.

Original Artemis V lander mission plan

After docking to the Gateway, two astronauts will board the Blue Moon lunar lander and fly it down to the Lunar south pole to land near the Lunar Terrain Vehicle. This will be the first lunar landing since Apollo 17 to use an unpressurized lunar rover. It is planned to have the two astronauts on the surface of the Moon for about one week where they will conduct science and exploration activities.[3]

Prior to February 2026, Artemis V was scheduled to launch no earlier than March 2030.[4]

Spacecraft

Space Launch System

The Space Launch System is a super-heavy-lift launcher used to launch the Orion spacecraft from Earth to a trans-lunar orbit.

Orion

Orion is the crew transport vehicle used by all Artemis missions. It will transport the crew from Earth to the Gateway orbit, and return them to Earth.

Gateway

Gateway is a small modular space station to be established in Near-rectilinear halo orbit (NRHO) in December 2027. The first two Gateway elements will launch together aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket in December 2027. The I-Hab habitat module will be delivered by Artemis IV.

Blue Origin's Blue Moon lander

The Blue Moon lander will transfer astronauts from the Gateway to the Lunar surface and back. Blue Origin will be the second provider to deliver Artemis astronauts to the lunar surface. NASA previously contracted SpaceX to develop and demonstrate the Starship Human Landing System.

Blue Origin will design, develop, test, and verify its Blue Moon lander to meet NASA's human landing system requirements for recurring astronaut expeditions to the lunar surface. In addition to design and development work, the contract includes one uncrewed demonstration mission to the lunar surface and the crewed demo in 2030. The total award value of the contract is $3.4 billion.[3]

Lunar Terrain Vehicle

The Lunar Terrain Vehicle is an unenclosed rover being developed by NASA that astronauts will drive on the Moon while wearing spacesuits.

See also

References

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