NASA has announced a new target date for the highly anticipated Artemis II crewed mission to the moon: April 1.
It may be on April Fools’ Day, but the space agency is deadly serious about finally getting its massive SLS (Space Launch System) rocket, Orion spacecraft, and four astronauts airborne in what will be the first crewed lunar-bound flight since the final Apollo mission in 1972.
The upcoming mission will take the crew around the moon rather than landing on its surface, with the first lunar landing of the Artemis era currently targeted for 2028.
NASA shared the new target launch date at a press conference on Thursday. It said that following the Artemis II Flight Readiness Review, the launch team had “polled ‘go’ to proceed toward launch.”
All being well, the team will roll the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, March 19, with a launch attempt set for the beginning of the following month at 6:20 p.m. ET on April 1.
NASA had been hoping to launch Artemis II in February, but it was forced to call a halt to proceedings after technical issues with the SLS rocket surfaced during a wet dress rehearsal, a key test that’s essentially a full launch simulation, bar the actual lift-off.
Notably, NASA isn’t planning to conduct another wet dress rehearsal prior to launch, with NASA’s Shawn Quinn telling NASASpaceflight that it has already run the necessary checks and tests following work on the rocket in recent days.
All being well, the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft carrying astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen will blast off the launchpad next month.
NASA said that if the two-hour launch window on April 1 doesn’t work out for technical reasons or due to inclement weather, there will be additional launch opportunities on each of the following five days, and a further one on April 30.
After launch, the Orion spacecraft will enter Earth orbit for system checks before performing a burn to put it on a trajectory that loops around the moon. It’ll then use Earth-moon gravity to bring Orion back for a Pacific Ocean splashdown about 10 days after launch.
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