Artemis II is NASA’s last moon mission without Silicon Valley
The origins of NASA’s current lunar campaign trace a complicated path back to the second Bush administration, which began developing an enormous rocket and a spacecraft called Orion to return to the moon.
The SLS is the most powerful operational rocket in the world today.
Next time around, however, the pressure will be on SpaceX or Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin.
The two companies are competing to see who will put boots on the lunar regolith.
That, NASA decided, would come from the new generation of venture-backed space firms.
The agency also turned to a handful of private space companies to deploy robotic landers for reconnaissance and testing, including Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines.
SpaceX bid to use its Starship rocket as a lander and, in 2021, won the job.
It was a controversial decision.
After years of waiting for the spacecraft, NASA chose to push back an attempt to land on the moon and rejigger its program.
Blue Origin was added to the roster in 2023 to build its own human landing system.
In March, Isaacman scrapped plans, long seen as wasteful or politically motivated by outside observers, to build a lunar space station called Gateway, and to invest in expensive upgrades for SLS. Now, he’s all in on the new generation of private space companies.
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