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NASA Gives $93 Million to Private Company for Moon Mission

autoevolution 6 Feb 2021, 10:39 UTC · by The Artemis Moon exploration program is a multi-tiered one. The most spectacular and visible of these tiers is, of course, the planned return of astronauts to the satellite. Yet the scope of Artemis is not simply to get people there and back, but establish a long-term human presence. 1 photo For that to happen, NASA needs some serious help, and the agency was not afraid to ask. Unlike the Apollo program of the 1970s, this one will be seriously backed by the private sector, which will actively participate in virtually every aspect of Artemis. Technically, humans will land on the Moon in 2024, but preparations for what’s to come after that – that is an orbital station around the Moon and eventually a base on the surface – will start much sooner.

Wealthy international crew forks over millions to fly Crew Dragon to space station

Wealthy international crew forks over millions to fly Crew Dragon to space station Axiom Space reveals three investors will fly to ISS, possibly in early 2022 Updated:  Tags:  The Axiom-1 crew from left to right: former NASA astronaut and Axiom vice president Michael López-Alegría, Mark Pathy, Larry Connor and Eytan Stibbe. Image credit: Axiom (WKMG 2020) CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – A group of uber-rich international businessmen will fly in a SpaceX Crew Dragon to the International Space Station, launching from Florida within a year, Axiom Space revealed Tuesday. The private Houston space company unveiled its first paying crew Tuesday, known as the Axiom Mission 1, or AX-1, who have paid a whopping $55 million for their seats inside the Dragon spacecraft. SpaceX made history last year, becoming the first private company to fly NASA astronauts to the space station, returning human spaceflight operations from Florida’s Space Coast.

Bay Area aerospace company selects SpaceX as vehicle to moon

Bay Area aerospace company selects SpaceX as vehicle to moon Community Impact Newspaper Replay Video UP NEXT Bay Area-based company Intuitive Machines has selected SpaceX as the company that will deliver two of its payloads to the moon, according to a Jan. 13 press release. There are five awarded Commercial Lunar Payload Services missions to the lunar surface over the next three years. Intuitive Machines has two of the missions, and both will be launched by SpaceX, the release states. Intuitive Machines is developing Nova-C, a lunar lander that is on track to launch in the fourth quarter of 2021, according to a company spokesperson. A second mission is said to be already scheduled for 2022. Nova-C will deliver NASA payloads to the lunar surface, and the scientific data Nova-C gathers during its 13.5 days of life on the moon will help NASA in its mission to land humans on the moon as early as 2024, the first time since the 1970s.

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