Trump’s plan to put Americans back on moon
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Artemis 2 is one of the most anticipated missions since the Apollo program ended in 1972, marking the first time in over 50 years that humans will return closer to the vicinity of the Moon.The
President Donald Trump signed a sweeping executive order on 18 December 2025 that commits the United States to landing astronauts on the Moon by 2028 and establishing initial groundwork for a permanent lunar presence by 2030,
Jared Isaacman has poured fuel on the new space race between Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, saying NASA will pick whichever lunar lander is ready first.
With NASA’s first launch toward the moon in five decades potentially only a few months away, the space agency has just released the first episode of a new show that focuses on the highly anticipated mission.
In a sweeping reset of US space policy, President Donald Trump on December 18, 2025, signed an executive order directing NASA to return astronauts to the Moon by 2028, establish the first elements of a permanent lunar base by 2030,
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Artemis 2 explained: Critical facts about NASA’s moon expedition
Artemis 2 is a mission that will allow astronauts to travel to and from the moon. During the journey, the astronauts will test NASA’s Orion spacecraft, the SLS rocket, and other systems. It is mainly to ensure that future missions to the moon can be conducted safely.
China plans 2026 debut of new rocket for crewed lunar and LEO missions China is building towards a debut Long March 10 rocket launch in what will be a major test for the country’s crewed lunar landing plans.
For Artemis IV, Lunar Outpost will partner with the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder, the University of Central Florida, and the University of California, Berkeley to support the DUSTER investigation to study lunar dust and plasma.
Half a century after the Apollo astronauts left the last bootprints in lunar dust, the Moon has once again become a destination of fierce ambition and delicate engineering. This time, it’s not just superpowers racing to plant flags, but also private ...
A joint research team from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) and the Unmanned Exploration Laboratory (UEL) has developed a transformative wheel capable of navigating the moon's most extreme terrains,