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NASA’s Moon Return: A New Roadmap for a Safer Landing

ivanusma70 February 28, 2026 2 minutes read
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The dream of humans walking on the Moon again is very much alive, but NASA is taking a more cautious, step-by-step approach. The agency recently announced significant changes to its ambitious Artemis program, aiming for a safer and more refined journey back to the lunar surface.

Originally, Artemis III was slated to put astronauts on the Moon for the first time since 1972. However, due to various technical glitches – including pesky helium and hydrogen leaks in its Space Launch System rocket – and concerns from independent safety panels about doing “too much too soon,” NASA is hitting the reset button.

Administrator Jared Isaacman explained the shift: “Everybody agrees this is the only way forward.” He emphasized a return to basics, focusing on “evolutionary steps” rather than giant leaps. This mirrors the original Apollo program, which had multiple test missions before Neil Armstrong’s legendary “one small step.”

What does this mean for the timeline?
* The Artemis II mission, which will fly astronauts *around* the Moon without landing, is now pushed back from March 6 to April 1 at the earliest.
* The original Artemis III mission will no longer attempt a human landing. Instead, by mid-2027, it will launch as a low-Earth orbit mission to rigorously test essential technologies.
* The much-anticipated human moon landing will now be targeted for a new mission, Artemis IV, in 2028.

This new plan gives NASA crucial time to test its complex systems and gain more flight experience, ultimately paving a surer path to landing astronauts near the Moon’s south pole. It’s about patience and precision, ensuring the next giant leap for humankind is a safe one.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/feb/27/nasa-changes-delays-moon-missions

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