China appears to be posing a greater chance of bringing NASA back to Earth.
If everything goes according to the revised, troubled Starliner space capsules from Boeing will depart from the International Space Station on Friday evening and make an autonomous integrated return to Earth. Nearly two years after the Artemis I trip test was successful, but the heat shield on the Orion capsule showed unanticipated wear and tear, a debate continues at NASA over how to deal with the Artemis programme to bring us back to the moon.
Advertisement
” This will be an even higher-profile decision for NASA”, Eric Berger reported for Ars Technica on Wednesday,” with higher consequences—four astronauts will be on board, and hundreds of millions, if not billions, of people will be watching humanity’s first deep space mission in more than five decades”.
Here’s the shot stage version of the conversation:
- Artemis I returned properly. They would have been in no harm if explorers had been aboard.
- However, Orion’s heat shield did not burn aside as expected — a possible problem.
- If manned Artemis II follow the same rehabilitation page, make a sharper rehabilitation that will take less time, or get delayed while a new heating shield is designed, built, and tested?
No word on when or what it might be has been made by NASA. Also of note: Orion is a Lockheed-Martin project, never Boeing.  ,
Recommended:  , Kamala Seinfeld: A Campaign About Everything
Communist China is likewise kept secret about its plans for the moon. But, like NASA, the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program ( CLEP ) aims to put Taikonauts on the lunar surface in the 2029-2030 timeframe. China’s system has enjoyed nine effective missions to date, including a solar spacecraft, a rover, and perhaps a solar sample return to Earth. Step 4 begins in 2026 with the Chang’e 7 mission to spy getting locations and resources at the star’s south pole.
Advertisement
Technically speaking, NASA and our global partners are ahead of Backlinks, having conducted an Orion crew capsule autonomous evaluation mission around the moon and back two years ago. However, it has taken two years to completely understand Orion’s heat protect anomaly without any magnification. If a repair is needed, it may take another couple of years to style, develop, and test a new temperature weapon.
And those SLS launches cost a breathtaking ( not to mention inexcusable )$ 4.2 billion a pop. Sending up another unmanned Artemis test mission just is n’t in NASA’s budget. It’s simple to imagine how heated the debate at NASA is between choosing to use the existing heat shield and a more immediate reentry profile or spend years and billions on the program to include additional safety.
Please take note that what I wrote makes it appear more likely that China may conquer space by gaining more ground. If development continues on SpaceX’s dramatic Starship jet, Elon Musk had hit them both. Although Musk wants to travel to Mars rather than Luna, Starship flights should be so affordable that SpaceX was, at least theoretically, toss in a sky mission almost as an excuse.
Nevertheless, the clock is ticking, and CLEP is so far nine and zero.
I’d suggest that Congress may have no choice but to rescind Artemis if NASA decided the Orion heat shield needed to be redesigned. Otherwise, give SpaceX a few billion dollars, which is less than half the cost of one SLS-based Artemis start, and watch how quickly it may travel to the moon and back with Starship.
Advertisement
P. S. If you are n’t already a VIP supporter, please consider helping us keep independent news and analysis alive, and do n’t forget our 50 % off SAVEAMERICA promo code. If you are already a member, thank you so much for your help.