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NASA has rolled its 98-meter Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft back to Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center after completing repairs to a helium-system issue that forced a previous launch attempt to be scrubbed.
The agency is now targeting an early-April window, with the first opportunity set for 1 April, following delays caused earlier in March by the helium problem and in February by a hydrogen fuel leak.
The Artemis II crew — NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, along with Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen — have entered preflight quarantine and are preparing for a 10-day mission around the Moon and back.
The flight will not land on the lunar surface.
Instead, it will use a free-return trajectory that loops around the far side of the Moon, giving NASA its first crewed deep-space mission since Apollo 17 in 1972 and the first human lunar vicinity mission in more than 50 years.
The mission is intended to verify Orion, life-support systems, communications, and heat-shield performance before later landing attempts.
🔗 Based On
Science & Environment | Latest News & Updates | BBC NewsArtemis II: Inside the Moon mission to fly humans further than ever
EL PAÍS EnglishFrom ‘Apollo 8’ to ‘Artemis 2’: Six decades after first flight to the Moon, the space race is no longer the same
Euronews | Latest breaking news available as free video on demandNASA aims for April launch after delays to Moon mission







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