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Lunar and cislunar missions and support services

Lunar and cislunar missions and support services

Lunar and cislunar missions are forms of space journeys; lunar references landing on the moon, and cislunar refers to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon.

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Lunar and cislunar missions and support services

Lunar and Cislunarcislunar missions are forms of space journeys; lunar references landing on the moon, lunar referencing landing on the moon and cislunar referringrefers to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon.

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Lunar and cislunar missions are forms of space journeys. Lunar missions refer to those that land on the moon's surface, while cislunar missions refer to spacecraft traveling in the space between Earth and the moon. CislunarCislunar is Latin for "on this side of the moon,;" however, there is not a commonly accepted definition of cislunar space across the international or technical community. Competing definitions include the following:

  • The space between the Earth and the moon, including the moon's orbit, low Earth orbit (LEO), medium Earth orbit (MEO), and geosynchronous orbit (GEO).
  • The space between GEO and the moon's surface.
...

There are also military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions, and a growing number of countries are pursuing military uses in space. Specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon hold important strategic value. This includes locations with specific physical properties, such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources. With the signing of the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act, the US government committed to funding the US Space Force (USSF), its first new military service in over 70seventy years. The USSF is responsible for "organizing training, and equipping Guardians to conduct global space operations that enhance the way our joint and coalition forces fight, while also offering "organizing training, and equipping Guardians to conduct global space operations that enhance the way our joint and coalition forces fight, while also offering decision makersdecision-makers military options to achieve national objectives." military options to achieve national objectives." Other nations pursuing military applications in space include India (performed an anti-satellite weapons test), Iran (launched military satellites), China (established the Strategic Support Force to handle the fields of space, cyber, and the electromagnetic spectrum), Russia (set up an independent Space Force), and France (established the Space Command), and others.

...

Lunar exploration includes any mission aiming to land on the moon's surface,; this could beinclude mannedcrewed or unmanneduncrewed missions with either a lander or rover component. The Soviet Union was the first nation to perform a successful soft landing on the moon with the Luna 9 mission in early 1966. This was followed 4four months later by NASA's Surveyor 1 mission, successfully landing on the lunar surface on June 2, 1966. While other countries and the European Space Agency (ESA) have performed hard landings on the moon, only China has successfully joined the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia in performing a successful soft landing. In December 2013, China's Chang'e 3 lander touched down, the first lunar landing since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 mission in 1976. China's Chang'e 4 completed the first soft landing on the dark side of the moon in 2019. The Yutu-2 rover, part of the Chang'e 4 mission, is the only operational rover on the moon. Data from China's Lunar Exploration Ground Application System in September 2022, showed the solar-powered rover has traveled 1,029 meters (3,376 feet) across the Von Kármán crater.

...

Multiple other countries with active space programs or privately funded space programs have stated their intention for mannedcrewed or unmanneduncrewed soft landings on the moon by 2030. These include:

  • Canada—possible autonomous impactor mission as well as a joint mission with the EU and Japan.
  • European Union—possible joint lander and sample-return mission alongside Japan and Canada, possible solo rover mission.
  • India—following the high-speed touchdown of Chandrayaan-1 and the failed soft landing of Chandrayaan-2, India will again attempt a successful soft landing with Chandrayaan-3.
  • Japan—Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is planning a crewed landing,; privately held company ispace is working with the US and UAE on lander-focused missions.
  • Mexico—sending micro rover as payload on a future US/Mexico joint mission.
  • South Africa—planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • South Korea—planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • Turkey—planned hard and soft landing missions by the end of the decade.
...

NASA's Artemis Program is a series of missions to land the first woman and first person of color on the moon. The program is a collaboration with commercial and international partners and is looking to establish the first long-term presence on the moon, including building the Artemis Base Camp on the lunar surface and the Gateway in lunar orbit.

...
...
...

Cislunar travel and exploration refer to travel or explorations occurring in the spaces between the Earth and the Moonmoon. Cislunar travel is becoming more popularized by the private and public sectors due to the rising demand to commercialize space travel. The commercialization of space travel is aimed at making low-orbit space a premier destination for vacationing, cargo transport, and expanding in space-capable technologies. Pushing for commercialization allows private companies to develop technologies that further deep-space exploration while creating economies in low-orbit for the general public. NASA states that turning over low-orbit travel to the private industry allows federally-funded space programs to focus on the larger goal of landing humans on Mars.

...

Cislunar space includes the five Lagrangian points that offer stable orbits in reference to the Earth and moon. For example, the James Webb Space Telescope launched on December 25th, 2021, orbits the Sunsun at the second Lagrange point (L2), allowing it to stay in line with the Earth as it moves around the Sunsun. The first and second Lagrange points, L1 always in front of the moon and L2 always behind the moon, offer benefits for transport purposes. Vehicles visiting a future space station placed at L1 and L2 do not require reentry shells or landing legs. Even large objects can be kept at Lagrange points with minimal propellant.

...
  • Utilizing the unique characteristics of space (microgravity, vacuum, high-intensity solar exposure, isolation from Earth, etc.) to produce useful knowledge and products.
  • Harvesting and processing material and resources from celestial bodies.
  • Building more sophisticated structures in Earth and lunar orbit.
  • Utilizing radio-quiet environments for a new generation of radio astronomy.
...
...
MannedCrewed government cislunar space stations

The International Space station was launched on November 20, 1998. Owned by federal governments, it has remained in orbit since its initial launch. It is consistently mannedcrewed by astronauts and is never left unattended. Five government space organizations are responsible for the International Space Station operations. These are:

...

The China National Space Administration first launched a space station, Tiangong-1, into Earth orbit in September 2011, which hosted astronauts twice in 2012 and 2013. It was put into sleep mode in 2013. In September 2016, China launched its successor, Tiangong-2, which hosted two astronauts for 30thirty days after launching. In 2018, they announced Tiangong-2 would eventually de-orbit in a controlled destruction. This occurred on July 19 July, 2019, with the spacecraft disintegrating over the Pacific Ocean. The two previous space stations paved the way for a permanent Tiangong space station, the first module of which, named Tianhe, launched on April 29, 2021. This was followed by two experiment modules launched on July 24, 2022, and October 31, 2022.

Timeline

November 17, 2022

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy releases the US'sUnited States' first National Cislunar Science and Technology (S&T) Strategy.

January 3, 2019

The mission delivereddelivers a landing platform and a rover named Yutu-2.

Edits on 21 Dec, 2022
Arthur Smalley
Arthur Smalley edited on 21 Dec, 2022
Edits made to:
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Article

There are also significant military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions with specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon itself holding important strategic value. This includes locations with specific physical properties such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources.

There are also military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions, and a growing number of countries are pursuing military uses in space. Specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon hold important strategic value. This includes locations with specific physical properties such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources. With the signing of the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act, the US government committed to funding the US Space Force (USSF), its first new military service in over 70 years. The USSF is responsible for "organizing training, and equipping Guardians to conduct global space operations that enhance the way our joint and coalition forces fight, while also offering decision makers military options to achieve national objectives." Other nations pursuing military applications in space include India (performed an anti-satellite weapons test), Iran (launched military satellites), China (established the Strategic Support Force to handle the fields of space, cyber, and the electromagnetic spectrum), Russia (set up an independent Space Force), France (established the Space Command), and others.

...

Lunar exploration includes any missionsmission aiming to land on the moon's surface, this could be manned or unmanned missions with either a lander or rover component. The Soviet Union was the first nation to perform a successful soft landing on the moon with the Luna 9 mission in early 1966. This was followed 4 months later by NASA's Surveyor 1 mission, successfully landing on the lunar surface on June 2, 1966. While other countries and the European Space Agency (ESA) have performed hard landings on the moon, only China has successfully joined the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia in performing a successful soft landing. In December 2013, China's Chang'e 3 lander touched down, the first lunar landing since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 mission in 1976. China's Chang'e 4 completed the first soft landing on the dark side of the moon in 2019. China'sThe Yuyu-2Yutu-2 rover, part of the Chang'e 4 mission, is the only operational rover on the moon since it landed in 2019. Data from China's Lunar Exploration Ground Application System in September 2022, showed the solar-powered rover has traveled 1,029 meters (3,376 feet) across the Von Kármán crater.

...

NASA's Artemis Program is a series of missions to land the first woman and first person of color on the moon. The program is a collaboration with commercial and international partners is looking to establish the first long-term presence on the moon, including building the Artemis Base Camp on the lunar surface and the Gateway in lunar orbit.

...

Cislunar travel and exploration refer to travel or explorations occurring in the spaces between the Earth and the Moon. Cislunar travel is becoming more popularized by the private and public sectors due to the rising demand to commercialize space travel. The commercialization of space travel is aimed at making low-orbit space a premier destination for vacationing, cargo transport, and expansionexpanding in space-capable technologies. Pushing for commercialization allows private companies to develop technologies that further deep-space exploration while creating economies in low-orbit for the general public. NASA states that turning over low-orbit travel to the private industry allows federally-funded space programs to focus on the larger push-goal of landing humans on Mars.

...

Cislunar space includes the five Lagrangian points that offer stable orbits in reference to the Earth and moon. For example, the James Webb Space Telescope launched on December 25th, 20222021, orbits the Sun at the second Lagrange point (L2), allowing it to stay in line with the Earth as it moves around the Sun. The first and second Lagrange points, L1 always in front of the moon and L2 always behind the moon, offer benefits for transport purposes. Vehicles visiting a future space station placed at L1 and L2 do not require reentry shells or landing legs. Even large objects can be kept at Lagrange points with minimal propellant.

...
  • Supporting research and development to enable future growth in cislunar space. R&D opportunities in cislunar space range from novel discoveries in space science to the development of new Cislunar technologies toand new breakthroughs in understanding the effects of the space environment on humans.
Timeline

November 17, 2022

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy releases the US's first National Cislunar Science and Technology (S&T) Strategy.

November 16, 2022

NASA mission Artemis I launches to demonstrate Orion's systems in a spaceflight environment.

April 22, 2022

Iran launches its first military satellite, Noor 1.

December 25, 2021

The James Webb Space Telescope launches on an Ariane 5 rocket.

The telescope will orbit the Sun at the second Lagrange point (L2).

April 29, 2021

The first segment of the Chinese space station, Tianhe, launches.

December 20, 2019

President Trump signs the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act creating the Space Force, a stand-alone sixth branch of the US military.

September 2019

France establishes the Space Command (Commandement de l’espace, or CDE) reorganizing its space capabilities.

March 2019

India conducts an anti-satellite weapons test.

January 3, 2019

Chinese mission Chang-e lands on the far side of the moon.

The mission delivered a landing platform and a rover named Yutu-2.

December 31, 2015

China creates the Strategic Support Force, charged with developing and employing most of the country's space capabilities.

2015

Russia merges its Space Force with the Air Force, consolidating comman authority.

December 13, 2013

Chinese mission Chang'e 3 performs a soft landing on the lunar surface.

The mission is the first lunar landing since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 mission in 1976.

November 2, 2000

The first crew resides in the International Space Station.

NASA Astronaut Bill Shepherd and cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev become the first crew onboard the station.

November 20, 1998

The first International Space Station (ISS) segment launches.

The Zarya Control Module launches aboard a Russian Proton rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan.

1992

Russa creates the Space Force, a special branch overseeing space launches, space defense, and long-range radars.
Edits on 15 Dec, 2022
Arthur Smalley
Arthur Smalley edited on 15 Dec, 2022
Edits made to:
Timeline (+12 events) (+2426 characters)
Article (+95/-74 characters)
Article

There are also significant military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions with specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon itself holding important strategic value held by specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon itself. This includes locations with specific physical properties such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources.

...

Lunar exploration includes any missions aiming to land on the moon's surface, this could be manned or unmanned missions with either a lander or rover component. The Soviet Union was the first nation to perform a successful soft landing on the moon with the Luna 9 mission in early 1966. This was followed 4 months later by NASA's Surveyor 1 mission, successfully landing on the lunar surface on June 2, 1966. While other countries and unionsthe European Space Agency (ESA) have performed hard landings on the moon, only China has successfully joined the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia in performing a successful soft landing. In December 2013, China's Chang'e 3 lander touched down, the first lunar landing since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 mission in 1976. China's Chang'e 4 completed the first soft landing on the dark side of the moon in 2019. China's Yuyu-2 rover, part of the Chang'e 4 mission, is the only operational rover on the moon since it landed in 2019. Data from China's Lunar Exploration Ground Application System in September 2022, showed the solar-powered rover has traveled 1,029 meters (3,376 feet) across the Von Kármán crater.

Timeline

August 18, 1976

Soviet Mission Luna 24 lands on the moon.

The last of the Luna program, Luna 24 was the third Soviet mission to retrieve ground samples.

December 7, 1972

NASA's Apollo 17 mission launches.

Apollo's most extensive lunar exploration program, the crew spend over three days on the moon performing three moowalks each lasting more than seven hours.

April 16, 1972

NASA's Apollo 16 mission launches.

Using a lunar rover the crew travel over 16 miles across three moonwalks.

July 26, 1971

NASA's Apollo 15 mission launches.

The mission carried a lunar rover, with crew spending more than 18 hours on the lunar service travelling 17 miles in the rover setting up experiements and collecting samples.

January 31, 1971

NASA's Apollo 14 mission launches.

The crew spent more than nine hours on the lunar service setting up a number of experiments.

April 11, 1970

NASA's Apollo 13 mission launches, after an explosion crippling the spacecraft the crew successfully return home using the lunar module as a lifeboat.

November 14, 1969

NASA's Apollo 12 mission launches delivering astronauts to the moon.

Among the missions objectives are to recover pieces of Surveyor 3 which had been on the Moon for more than two years.

July 20, 1969

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, crew members of NASA's Apollo 11 mission, become the first humans to walk on the moon.

While on the moon, they collected soil and rock samples, set up experiments, planted an American flag, and left behind medallions honoring the Apollo 1 crew.

May 18, 1969

NASA's Apollo 10 mission launches.

A dress rehearsal for the first lunar landing, the Apollo 10 crew tested all aspects of the mission. Commander Thomas Stafford and lunar module pilot Eugene Cernan flew the lunar module for eight hours, coming within 10 miles of the lunar surface.

March 3, 1969

Apollo 9 launches to test NASA's lunar module in Earth's orbit.

While remaining in Earth's orbit, commander James McDivitt and lunar module pilot Rusty Schweickart separate the lunar module for six hours and fly independently. Schweickart also performed a spacewalk to test spacesuits for the moon.

December 24, 1968

NASA's Apollo 8 becomes the first manned mission to orbit the moon.

The first mission using the Saturn V booster, the Apollo 8 crew (Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, and Bill Anders) became the first humans to orbit another world, spending 20 hours orbiting the moon.

October 11, 1968

Apollo 7 launches, becoming the first NASA Apollo mission to get to space.

The three crew members conducted a number of tests of spacecraft systems and conducted the fist live TV program from an American spacecraft.

Edits on 14 Dec, 2022
Arthur Smalley
Arthur Smalley edited on 14 Dec, 2022
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Lunar and cislunar missions are forms of space journeys. Lunar missions refer to those that land on the moon's surface, while cislunar missions refer to spacecraft traveling in the space between Earth and the moon. Cislunar is Latin for "on this side of the moon," however, there is not a commonly accepted definition of Cislunarcislunar space across the international or technical community. Competing definitions include:

  • The volumespace between the Earth and the moon, including the moon's orbit, low Earth orbit (LEO), medium Earth orbit (MEO), and geosynchronous orbit (GEO).
  • The space between GEO toand the moon's surface.
...

Various companies perform business operations, missions, and more in cislunar space, and many are making strides to land rovers and humans on the lunar surface for further space exploration and scientific discovery. Government efforts can enable or utilize private industry missions, or in some instances, commercial space companies are independently pursuing their own missions. Many nations view lunar and cislunar investment as a way of advancing their domestic space industry and as the initial step towards greater presence in near-Earth space. They are also driven by the scientific and economic factors of having a space presence and building international partnerships. Lunar and cislunar missions also have the potential for celestial resource extraction and in situ resource utilization (ISRU) or the production and manufacture of materials found on the moon and other celestial bodies.

...

There are also significant military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions with the important strategic value held by specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon itself. This includes locations with specific physical properties such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources.

...
  • Canada—PossibleCanada—possible autonomous impactor mission as well as a joint mission with the EU and Japan.
  • European Union—PossibleUnion—possible joint lander and sample-return mission alongside Japan and Canada, possible solo rover mission.
  • India—FollowingIndia—following the high-speed touchdown of Chandrayaan-1 and the failed soft landing of Chandrayaan-2, India will again attempt a successful soft landing with Chandrayaan-3.
  • Mexico—SendingMexico—sending micro rover as payload on a future US/Mexico joint mission.
  • South Africa—PlannedAfrica—planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • South Korea—PlannedKorea—planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • Turkey—PlannedTurkey—planned hard and soft landing missions by the end of the decade.
  • Ukraine—WorkingUkraine—working alongside collaborators in UK and US to conduct a mission to explore lunar caves. The conflict with Russia will likely delay the mission.
  • United Arab Emirates—CompaniesEmirates—companies based in UAE, Japan, and the US are working together on an upcoming mission in which a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will carry a Japanese-designed lander and the UAE's lunar rover.
  • United Kingdom—WorkingKingdom—working alongside Ukrainian and USA-based companies to conduct a mission to explore lunar caves, also planning a solo sample retrieval mission.
...

...

Cislunar travel and exploration referencesrefer to travel or explorations occurring in the spaces between the Earth and the Moon. Cislunar travel is becoming more popularized by the private and public sectors due to the rising demand to commercialize space travel. The commercialization of space travel is aimed at making low-orbit space a premier destination for vacationing, cargo transport, and expansion in space capablespace-capable technologies. Pushing for commercialization allows private companies to develop technologies that further deep-space exploration while creating economies in low-orbit for the general public. NASA states that turning over low-orbit travel to the private industry allows federally-funded space programs to focus on the larger push- landing humans on Mars.

Cislunar space includes the five Lagrangian points that offer stable orbits in reference to the Earth and moon. For example, the James Webb Space Telescope launched on December 25th, 2022, orbits the Sun at the second Lagrange point (L2), allowing it to stay in line with the Earth as it moves around the Sun. The first and second Lagrange points, L1 always in front of the moon and L2 always behind the moon, offer benefits for transport purposes. Vehicles visiting a future space station placed at L1 and L2 do not require reentry shells or landing legs. Even large objects can be kept at Lagrange points with minimal propellant.

On November 17, 2022, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy released the US's first National Cislunar Science and Technology (S&T) Strategy to address how to "support responsible, peaceful, and sustainable exploration and use of Cislunar space... by all space-faring nations and entities, consistent with the U.S. Space Priorities Framework." NASA estimates 2022-2032 will see human activity in cislunar space that will equal or exceed all previous human activity from 1957 to 2022. The National Strategy includes four key science and technology objectives:

  • Supporting research and development to enable future growth in cislunar space. R&D opportunities in cislunar space range from novel discoveries in space science to the development of new Cislunar technologies to new breakthroughs in understanding the effects of the space environment on humans.
  • Expanding international cooperation in cislunar space.
  • Extending U.S. space situational awareness capabilities into cislunar space, including early warning systems for potentially hazardous asteroids.
  • Implementing cislunar communications and positioning, navigation, and timing capabilities with scalable and interoperable approaches.

Cislunar space has the potential to advance science, technology, and exploration. Applications include:

  • Utilizing the unique characteristics of space (microgravity, vacuum, high-intensity solar exposure, isolation from Earth, etc.) to produce useful knowledge and products.
  • Harvesting and processing material and resources from celestial bodies.
  • Building more sophisticated structures in Earth and lunar orbit.
  • Supplying future installations on the moon
  • Utilizing radio-quiet environments for a new generation of radio astronomy.
...

The International Space station was launched on November 20, 1998, and is the sole space station. ownedOwned by federal governments., Itit has remained in orbit since its initial launch. It is consistently manned by astronauts and is never left unattended. Five government space organizations are responsible for the International Space Station operations. These are:

  • NASA (United States)
  • Roscosmos (Russia)
  • CSA (Canada)
  • JAXA (Japan)
  • ESA (European Space Agency member countries)

The China National Space Administration first launched a space station, Tiangong-1, into Earth orbit in September 2011 which hosted astronauts twice in 2012 and 2013. It was put into sleep mode in 2013. In September 2016, China launched its successor Tiangong-2, which hosted two astronauts for 30 days after launching. In 2018, they announced Tiangong-2 would eventually de-orbit in a controlled destruction. This occurred on 19 July 2019 with the spacecraft disintegrating over the Pacific Ocean. The two previous space stations paved the way for a permanent Tiangong space station, the first module of which, named Tianhe, launched on April 29, 2021. This was followed by two experiment modules launched on July 24, 2022, and October 31, 2022.

Arthur Smalley
Arthur Smalley edited on 14 Dec, 2022
Edits made to:
Article (+1 images) (+5699/-934 characters)
Article

Lunar and Cislunar missions are forms of space journeys, lunar referencing landing on the moon and cislunar referring to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon. Various companies perform business operations, missions, and more in cislunar space, and many are making strides to land rovers and humans on the lunar surface for further space exploration and scientific discovery.

Lunar and cislunar missions are forms of space journeys. Lunar missions refer to those that land on the moon's surface, while cislunar missions refer to spacecraft traveling in the space between Earth and the moon. Cislunar is Latin for "on this side of the moon," however, there is not a commonly accepted definition of Cislunar space across the international or technical community. Competing definitions include:

  • The volume between the Earth and the moon, including the moon's orbit, low Earth orbit (LEO), medium Earth orbit (MEO), and geosynchronous orbit (GEO).
  • The space between GEO to the moon's surface.

The lack of a consensus is likely due to there being no clear point or distance from Earth at which the properties of the environment change significantly to separate it as cislunar space.

Lunar and cislunar missions date back to the 1950s and the space race between the United States and the Soviet Union. While the Soviet Union had many firsts, including launching the first artificial satellite (Sputnik, 1957) and the first spacecraft to reach the moon (Luna 1, 1959), the United States became the first, and currently only, country to land humans on the moon. On July 20, 1969, the Apollo 11 mission landed US astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin on the Lunar surface.

Various companies perform business operations, missions, and more in cislunar space, and many are making strides to land rovers and humans on the lunar surface for further space exploration and scientific discovery. Government efforts can enable or utilize private industry missions, or in some instances, commercial space companies are independently pursuing their own missions. Many nations view lunar and cislunar investment as a way of advancing their domestic space industry and as the initial step towards greater presence in near-Earth space. They are also driven by the scientific and economic factors of having a space presence and building international partnerships. Lunar and cislunar missions also have the potential for celestial resource extraction and in situ resource utilization (ISRU) or the production and manufacture of materials found on the moon and other celestial bodies.

There are also significant military reasons for pursuing lunar and cislunar missions with important strategic value held by specific locations in cislunar space and on the moon itself. This includes locations with specific physical properties such as orbital stability or the potential for more beneficial resources.

...

Lunar exploration includes any missions aiming to land on the moon's surface, this could be manned or unmanned missions with either a lander or rover component. The Soviet Union was the first nation to perform a successful soft landing on the moon with the Luna 9 mission in early 1966. This was followed 4 months later by NASA's Surveyor 1 mission, successfully landing on the lunar surface on June 2, 1966. While other countries and unions have performed hard landings on the moon, only China has successfully joined the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia in performing a successful soft landing. In December 2013, China's Chang'e 3 lander touched down, the first lunar landing since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 mission in 1976. China's Chang'e 4 completed the first soft landing on the dark side of the moon in 2019. China's Yuyu-2 rover, part of the Chang'e 4 mission, is the only operational rover on the moon since it landed in 2019. Data from China's Lunar Exploration Ground Application System in September 2022, showed the solar-powered rover has traveled 1,029 meters (3,376 feet) across the Von Kármán crater.

Stitched panoramic image from the Yutu-2 rover.

Multiple other countries with active space programs or privately funded space programs have stated their intention for manned or unmanned soft landings on the moon by 2030. These include:

  • Canada—Possible autonomous impactor mission as well as a joint mission with the EU and Japan.
  • European Union—Possible joint lander and sample-return mission alongside Japan and Canada, possible solo rover mission.
  • India—Following the high-speed touchdown of Chandrayaan-1 and the failed soft landing of Chandrayaan-2, India will again attempt a successful soft landing with Chandrayaan-3.
  • Israel—Israel-based SpaceIL's Beresheet moon lander reached the moon in February 2019 but crashed during landing. Follow-up attempts are planned.
  • Japan—Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is planning a crewed landing, privately held company ispace is working with the US and UAE on lander-focused missions.
  • Mexico—Sending micro rover as payload on a future US/Mexico joint mission.
  • South Africa—Planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • South Korea—Planned lander and rover mission could launch in 2030.
  • Turkey—Planned hard and soft landing missions by the end of the decade.
  • Ukraine—Working alongside collaborators in UK and US to conduct a mission to explore lunar caves. The conflict with Russia will likely delay the mission.
  • United Arab Emirates—Companies based in UAE, Japan, and the US are working together on an upcoming mission in which a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will carry a Japanese-designed lander and the UAE's lunar rover.
  • United Kingdom—Working alongside Ukrainian and USA-based companies to conduct a mission to explore lunar caves, also planning solo sample retrieval mission.

NASA's Artemis Program is a series of missions to land the first woman and first person of color on the moon. The program is a collaboration with commercial and international partners to establish the first long-term presence on the moon, including building the Artemis Base Camp on the lunar surface and the Gateway in lunar orbit.

...
Artemis project

The Artemis project is a US-government funded international human spaceflight program focused on landing the first woman and next man on the lunar surface in 2024. The program is headed by NASA but has received partnership and participation from various international space programs and private space companies. The program also aims to develop a sustainable long term lunar presence in an effort to create a foundation for private companies to develop a lunar economy and potential for human travel to Mars.

...
Edits on 12 Dec, 2022
Arthur Smalley
Arthur Smalley edited on 12 Dec, 2022
Edits made to:
Timeline (+14 events) (+3704 characters)
Timeline

January 10, 1968

NASA's Surveyor 7 probe lands on the moon returning over 21,000 images and 66 hours of alpha-scattering data.

The last mission of NASA's Surveyor prorgram, the seventh probe was a purely scientific mission outside of searching for potential future Apollo landing sights.

November 17, 1967

The Surveyor 6 probe fires its thrusters for 2.5 seconds lifting roughly 3 meters above the surface.

Cameras studied the spacecraft's original landing footprints to determine the soil's mechanical properties.

November 10, 1967

NASA's Surveyor 6 lands on the moon returning over 29,000 images.

September 11, 1967

NASA's Surveyor 5 lands on the moon with an alpha-backscatter instrument to determine the relative abundance of chemical elements in lunar material.

The lander returned over 18,000 images and the alpha scattering instrument found the soil composition to consist of more than half oxygen along with various amounts of silicon and aluminum.

April 20, 1967

NASA's Surveyor 3 lands on the moon carrying a surface sampling instrument.

The surface sampling instrument could reach 1.5 meters from the langer and dig up to 18 centimeters into the surface. The probe used the instrument to dig four trenches in view of the camera system concluding lunar soil had a consistency similar to wet sand with a bearing strength of about 10 pounds per square inch (0.7 kilograms per square centimeter, or 98 kilopascals).

June 1966

NASA's Surveyor 1 becomes the first US spacecraft to soft land on the moon.

The mission returned over 11,000 photographs of the lunar surface and temperature data. The Surveyor program is designed to obtain lunar and cislunar photographs as well as both scientific and technological information needed for the Apollo manned landing program.

April 3, 1966

Soviet mission, Luna 9, becomes the first spacecraft to orbit the moon.

The mission returned significant data including weak to non-existent magnetic field, cosmic radiation of 5 particles/cm2/sec, 198 micrometeoroid impacts, no discernable atmosphere, and a highly distorted gravity field, suggesting a non-uniform mass distribution. The gamma-ray spectrometer gave compositional information on the Moon's surface, showing it to be similar to terrestrial basalt.

February 3, 1966

Soviet mission, Luna 9, becomes the first spacecraft to perform a soft landing on the lunar surface.

Luna 9 included a suite of scientific instruments, returning data on the radiation dose at the lunar surface (roughly 30 millirads per day) and panoramic views of the nearby surface.

March 24, 1965

NASA's Ranger 9 mission returns images of the Alphonsus crater, data from the mission improved scientists understanding of the moon's mass, discovering its center of mass is displaced from its geometric center.

Ranger 9 was the last of NASA's Ranger missions.

February 20, 1965

NASA's Ranger 8 mission returns 7,000 images of the moon before impacting the lunar surface near the Sea of Tranquility, an area of interest for Apollo mission planners.

July 1, 1964

NASA's Ranger 7 mission transmits 4,308 images before impacting the lunar surface at the northern rim of the Sea of Clouds.

Ranger 7 marks the first significant success in the US's early lunar exploration.

October 7, 1959

Soviet mission, Luna 3, becomes the first spacecraft to photograph the far side of the moon.

Luna 2 takes 29 photographs covering 70% of the far side of the moon over a 40 minute period at distances between 63,500km and 66,700km.

September 14, 1959

Soviet mission, Luna 2, becomes the first spacecraft to land on the moon, impacting the surface east of Mare Serenitatis near the Aristides, Archimedes, and Autolycus craters.

January 4, 1959

Soviet mission, Luna 1, becomes the first spacecraft to reach the moon, passing within 5995 km of the lunar surface.

Luna 1 returned measurements on the Earth's radiation belt and outer space as well as discovering that the moon does not have a magnetic field.

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Title
Date
Link

How SpaceX and NASA Will Build The First Moon Base!

March 13, 2022

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Topic thumbnail

Lunar and cislunar missions and support services

Lunar and cislunar missions are forms of space journeys; lunar references landing on the moon, and cislunar refers to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon.

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Lunar exploration
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Lunar and Cislunar missions are forms of space journeys, lunar referencing landing on the moon and cislunar referring to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon. Various companies perform business operations, missions, and more in cislunar space, and many are making strides to land rovers and humans on the lunar surface for further space exploration and scientific discovery.

Lunar exploration

Many companies and organizations are interested in pursuing the return of humankind to the moon for exploratory and research purposes. The last lunar landing occurred on December 14, 1972, during the Apollo 17 mission when commander Eugene Cernan became the last man to set foot on the moon. Lunar exploration was paused largely due to a lack of financial backing for organizations like NASA, which was responsible for six total manned lunar landings between 1969 and 1972. NASA and other private organizations are now making large pushes for further lunar exploration efforts in manned and unmanned space crafts.

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GovernmentManned government cislunar space stations (manned)
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Lunar/ cislunar missions and support services Lunar and cislunar missions and support services

Lunar and Cislunar missions are forms of space journeys, lunar referencing landing on the moon and cislunar referring to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon.

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Lunar and Cislunar missions are forms of space journeys, lunar referencing landing on the moon and cislunar referring to the travel existing in the space between the Earth and the moon. Various companies perform business operations, missions, and more in cislunar space, and many are making strides to land rovers and humans on the lunar surface for further space explorationspace exploration and scientific discovery.

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