Space

SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket set to launch NASA moon outpost in 2024

An artist's impression of the gateway in lunar orbit
NASA
An artist's impression of the gateway in lunar orbit
NASA

NASA has announced that it will rely on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket to launch the first elements of its future Moon-orbiting space station. The initial core sections of the gateway, including the habitation unit and propulsion element, are currently expected to launch no earlier than May 2024.

America is set on returning astronauts to the Moon, mainly in order to test technologies that will be vital to the success of its ultimate goal of putting human boots on Mars under the auspices of the Artemis program.

A key element in the architecture of the Artemis program is a Moon-orbiting space station known as the Gateway. Upon completion, the outpost will be roughly a sixth the size of the International Space Station, and like the ISS, it will be capable of shifting its orbit to meet mission needs and if necessary, to avoid hazardous objects.

The new space station will serve as a rendezvous point for missions to the Moon, and eventually for forays deeper into the Solar System.

Currently, development is focused on the future station’s Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO) – which will be supplied by Northrop Grumman – and the Power and Propulsion Element (PPE), which is being designed and fabricated by Maxar Technologies.

The Halo section will be, as the name suggests, a pressurized module housing the crew’s living quarters. It will also be equipped with docking ports for visiting spacecraft, and facilities that will allow astronauts to conduct scientific experiments. This crewed section will be supported by the PPE element, which will provide HALO with power, high-speed communications and other vital resources.

NASA recently announced that it had awarded SpaceX with a lucrative contract to launch the first elements of the future outpost.

The $331.8 million dollar contract will see the two space station modules launched into orbit nestled safely inside the protective shroud of a Falcon Heavy rocket. The substantial sum covers the purchase of the rocket, along with costs relating to the launch and other mission expenses.

According to a NASA press release, the launch will happen no earlier than May 2024. Of course, the agency has a penchant for setting extremely ambitious targets for the launches of complex missions ... targets that are often missed when unforeseen delays rear their ugly heads.

Furthermore, on top of contending with the challenges of delivering the sections of a human rated space station, both Northrop Grumman and Maxar Technologies will be forced to handle the disruptive nature of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

Source: NASA

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
5 comments
Rbnyc2000
President Bush, who initiated the return to the Moon project once said," we may discover resources there that would Boggle the mind" .
Perhaps he knew something that we didn't? Perhaps we will discover when we return to the Moon that there are brother and sister humans already there. Perhaps they've been there all along waiting for us to find them. That would certainly Boggle some people's minds.
Derek Howe
Rbnyc2000 - dude...lay off the drugs.
BlueOak
@Derek, dude. Breath. Joke.
WB
how many more boring space stations do we need to put up there before we are all bored out of our minds. Land on the damn thing, don't keep circling it like a m#r#n... after how many boring decades of Space Station do these NASA dudes learn that we want people walking on the moon, on mars on pluto and some alpha centauri planet. The only good thing is that SpaceX makes some money that can fund the real stuff, not this lame has been space station stuff.
MattII
@WB, Actually, since the moon is tidally locked to Earth, an orbital station would be the only way of keeping tabs on stuff on the far side.