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Blue Origin’s uncrewed Blue Moon Mark 1 (MK1), nicknamed Endurance, completed environmental testing inside NASA’s Thermal Vacuum Chamber A at Johnson Space Center, NASA and company statements said on May 4–5, 2026.
The campaign verified MK1’s structural and thermal resilience and evaluated avionics, cryogenic propellant systems and autonomous guidance under simulated lunar vacuum and temperature extremes.
The work was conducted under a reimbursable Space Act Agreement that gave Blue Origin access to one of the world’s largest thermal vacuum facilities.
MK1 is a cargo demonstrator for NASA’s Artemis campaign and the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative; it is slated to deliver two NASA payloads to the Moon’s south pole this year — Stereo Cameras for Lunar Plume-Surface Studies and a Laser Retroreflective Array — and to demonstrate precision landing, cryogenic propulsion and autonomous descent control.
Lessons from MK1 will feed development of a larger, crew-capable Blue Moon MK2.
Blue Origin has signalled production work on a second MK1 at its Florida Lunar Plant 1 as the firm advances toward a late-2026 lunar delivery timeline.
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The tests address real, historically grounded risks from engine plumes and thermal/vacuum exposure, but commenters warn that hydrogen boil‑off, complex refueling choreography and alleged engine issues could strain schedules. Specific insider claims cited require independent verification.
🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Friday, May 8, 2026 19:03 UTC
Blue Origin lander clears major NASA tests
Tuesday, May 5, 2026 09:02 UTC
Blue Origin lunar lander clears NASA vacuum test








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