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Blue Origin’s uncrewed Blue Moon MK1 lander, Endurance, has completed a full environmental test campaign inside NASA’s large Thermal Vacuum Chamber at Johnson Space Center, agency and industry accounts said in early May 2026.
The campaign simulated deep-space vacuum and extreme temperature cycles to validate electronics, thermal systems and structure ahead of an uncrewed Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) demonstration mission that will carry two NASA science payloads.
Separately, a full-scale Blue Moon Mark 2 crew cabin mock-up is now operational at Johnson for human-in-the-loop training and design feedback as NASA prepares for orbital rendezvous and docking tests targeted for 2027 and crewed lunar returns in the following years.
Blue Origin plans to launch its lander on its New Glenn rocket, but New Glenn’s flight status and schedule remain subject to an FAA investigation of a recent second-stage failure, a factor that could affect timelines.
Key qualification steps still required include autonomous navigation, cryogenic propellant handling, precision landing and ascent back to orbit before any crewed missions.
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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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