"The New Moon Race is on! Upcoming space telescope will look at the universe in a whole new way."
Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents. Accessed on 03 March 2025, 2122 UTC.
Content and Source: https://scientificamerican.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiiscience journal.blogspot.com).
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Following the Blue Ghost touchdown this weekend, another commercial U.S. moon mission, the Athena lunar lander, is scheduled to make moonfall this coming Thursday. Meanwhile, yet another private effort, Japan's Resilience mission, is also enroute to the moon for a landing attempt targeted for some time in May. You may be wondering why there's such a busy rush for our nearest natural satellite. I certainly was, so I asked my colleague and our space and physics editor, Lee Billings: Why so many moon missions? "It's been official U.S. policy to get astronauts back to the moon for many years, across multiple presidential administrations," Billings told me. "The program of record to do that, NASA's Artemis program, is targeting its first crewed missions there later this decade. NASA has funded these U.S. commercial robotic lander missions as precursors for those notional future missions, ferrying cargo and experiments to the lunar surface at a lower cost than the space agency could achieve all by itself. Other nations are also interested in the moon, and they are either signing on to help with Artemis or pursuing ambitious missions of their own. The moon is a tempting target, and a natural 'stepping stone' for humanity to follow out further into the solar system." It seems the new race to the moon is well underway! |
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—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor |
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