NASA has shared a number of images showing what its upcoming Lunar Gateway space station will look like when it launches for the moon in 2024.
The agency said the orbiting laboratory would provide astronauts with a ‘home away from home’ during trips to the moon, and a staging post for lunar landings.
The orbiting lab will have a four person capacity and will see NASA work with some existing International Space Station partners including Europe, Japan and Canada.
Large parts of the station will be built by commercial partners and will have a docking port for the SpaceX Starship lunar lander that will ferry astronauts between the orbiting base and the surface of the moon.
NASA also confirmed that the platform will help address one of the biggest concerns for space travel beyond Earth’s orbit by measuring radiation levels.
The radiation-detecting suite of research instruments is planned to launch inside the first module of the multipurpose international outpost, which will be in a highly elliptical seven-day orbit around the Moon.
NASA has shared a number of images showing what its upcoming Lunar Gateway space station will look like when it launches for the moon in 2024
The agency said the orbiting laboratory would provide astronauts with a ‘home away from home’ during trips to the moon, and a staging post for lunar landings
The orbiting lab will have a four person capacity and will see NASA work with some existing International Space Station partners including Europe, Japan and Canada
Lunar Gateway forms a core part of the Artemis missions, which will see NASA put the first woman and next man on the moon by 2024, although it could be delayed.
The bulk of the Artemis mission, including the Lunar Gateway, will be sent to the moon using NASA’s new massive Space Launch System rocket.
Development on the rocket is nearly finished, with the first test flight – which will send the Orion spaceship around the moon without a crew – due to happen late this year or early next year.
However, NASA announced in February they would begin construction of Gateway using the SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch vehicle.
Elon Musk’s space firm will launch the foundational elements of the Gateway to lunar orbit.
This includes the Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) and the Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO).
They are expected to launch for the moon in May 2024 at the earliest, but could be as late as October 2024.
SpaceX also won the contract to land astronauts on the surface of the moon.
The contract, worth $2.9 billion, involves the prototype Starship spacecraft that is being tested at SpaceX’s south Texas facility.
SpaceX beat out Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and defence contractor Dynetics to be the sole provider for the system.
This was a surprising break from the past when NASA has chosen multiple companies in case one fails.
Industry analysts said the decision underscores the fact that SpaceX, founded by Musk in 2002 with the goal of colonising Mars, is now seen as NASA’s most trusted private sector partner.
Under the Artemis program to return humans to the Moon, NASA wants to use the Space Launch System rocket to launch four astronauts on board an Orion crew capsule, which will then dock with a lunar space station called Gateway.
The first crewed mission will be called Artemis 3, taking up to four astronauts to lunar orbit in the Orion capsule, where, if it is ready they will dock with the Gateway.
Starship will be waiting, docked with the Gateway, to receive two crew members for the final leg of the journey to the surface of the moon.
A view of the two elements of Gateway – power and propulsion element (PPE) and the habitation and logistics outpost (HALO)
A view of Gateway’s two elements – power and propulsion element (PPE) and the habitation and logistics outpost (HALO). The two elements will be launched together in 2024 on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy
The two modules are being built for NASA and will act as a staging post for trips to the lunar surface
The idea is for Gateway to be the go-between but for the initial mission Orion might dock directly with Starship – if Gateway isn’t ready.
The astronauts would then spend a week on the Moon before boarding Starship to return to lunar orbit, then take Orion back to Earth.
When it launches in 2024 the Gateway will have capacity for up to four people, but over time it is expected that the facility will grow, with new modules attached.
This is similar to the growth of the International Space Station, which currently has a nominal crew size of seven, which gradually increased since its launch in the late 1990s from between three and six.
The ISS will have a total of 11 people on board for a few days over the next week when the Crew-2 mission launches from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The Orion spaceship (left) will dock with the Gateway after travelling with astronauts from Earth and take astronauts back to the Earth from the Gateway after they’ve landed on the Moon
One day, as new modules launch for the Lunar Gateway, it could expand to become a science and exploration hub away from Earth’s close orbit.
There will be four core modules at launch, the Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) , which started life as part of an Asteroid Redirection Mission, which has since been cancelled by the NASA JPL team.
It will serve as the command and communication centre for Gateway, as well as power the wider station. It is being built by Maxar Technologies who were awarded a $375 million contract by NASA.
The second primary module, being launched by SpaceX in 2024 is the Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO), being built by Northrop Grumman and based ona. Cygnus Cargo resupply module.
It will have docking ports, batteries and communications antennae and a fully pressurised cabin for command, control and data handling capabilities.
The third module is being built by the European Space Agency and is called the European System Providing Refuelling, Infrastructure and Telecommunications (ESPRIT) module, also due to launch in 2024.
It will provide additional power, communications, airlock and science capabilities to the other two core modules. It is being built by Airbus and Thales Alenia Space.
SpaceX will operate flights between the Gateway and the lunar surface for NASA using a version of their Starship rocket
Other aspects of the module have been sub contracted to other European firms including some in the UK, with a further part of ESPRIT, the Refuelling Module, due to launch in 2027 with pressurised fuel tanks, a habitation corridor and docking ports.
The final of the first four modules s the International Habitation Module (I-HAB) being built by ESA and JAXA to provide further habitation space. the contract was given to Thales Alenia Space to launch in 2026.
ESA is funding the primary construction, with a life support system from JAXA, avionics from NASA and robotics from the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).
Future modules will include a logistics module, an airlock module, and a robotic manipulator arm to aid with repair work and docking spaceships.
The version of Starship being developed by SpaceX for lunar landings is adapted from the large rocket as it only has to operate in space and on the low gravity lunar surface
Humanity last stepped foot on the Moon in 1972 during the Apollo program.
NASA wants to go back and establish a sustainable presence, complete with a lunar space station, in order to test new technologies that will pave the way for a crewed mission to Mars.
The Artemis mission, including the Lunar Gateway, commits NASA to working with industry and international partners on sustainable lunar exploration, ahead of a crewed Mars mission in the 2030s.
Part of the work with international partners, including the European Space Agency, will see firms around the world, including in the UK, bid to build technology that will be used on or around the Moon.
When it first launches the Gateway will only have habitation and power modules with a maximum occupancy of four
Close-up of the two elements of Gateway – Power and propulsion element (PPE) and habitation and logistics outpost (HALO
The Gateway station will be movable to allow for astronauts to land on different parts of the surface of the moon
NASA had originally planned to work with Russia on the Gateway, another major partner in the International Space Station, but Russia announced it would partner with China instead.
Russia and China are working on their own accord, that will see them construct either a lunar space station or base on the surface of the moon.
Exact details of the partnership haven’t been revealed, but a memorandum of understanding signed by the two nations suggest a complex of experimental and research facilities will be constructed.
The base, it continued, would be ‘designed to conduct multidisciplinary and multipurpose research work.’
Russia has also announced it is considering withdrawing from the International Space Station project from 2025, citing concerns over the safety of the ageing facility.
A top Kremlin official warned that ‘disaster’ was looming for the ISS, putting the lives of crew members at risk due to its age – by 2025 is will be 27 years old and was originally designed to last between 15 and 30 years, according to NASA.
Russia says the first module that will make up a core part of its new hi-tech orbital base is already under construction.
The final orbiting laboratory will include a module designed to act as a tourist hotel, with room for four passengers at any time.
The International Space Station is also increasingly being opened up for tourist opportunities, with Tom Cruise working on a film project to shoot on the station in 2022.