NASA taps US astronauts, Italian for Artemis mission with SpaceX, Blue Origin mooncraft

Artemis III is the final mission planned before NASA attempts to land astronauts on the lunar surface in 2028.


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NASA taps US astronauts, Italian for Artemis mission with SpaceX, Blue Origin mooncraft

Artemis III is the final mission planned before NASA attempts to land astronauts on the lunar surface in 2028.

NASA taps US astronauts, Italian for Artemis mission with SpaceX, Blue Origin mooncraft

Astronauts Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas are unveiled as the NASA Artemis III mission crew at an event at NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, US, on Jun 9, 2026. (Photo: Reuters/Antranik Tavitian)

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NASA named three US astronauts and an Italian astronaut on Tuesday (Jun 9) to serve as the crew for its next Artemis mission, a spacecraft docking demonstration in Earth’s orbit next year that will test moon landers from Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin for the first time in space.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, at a ceremony in Houston, named US astronauts Andre Douglas, Frank Rubio and Randy Bresnik, as well as Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency, as the crew for Artemis III. It is due to launch late next year, with no specific date yet announced.

“Artemis III is an incredibly exciting, complicated and highly coordinated multi-launch campaign,” Jeremy Parsons, NASA’s Artemis program manager, said at the Houston event. 

“It’s going to happen in a short period of time with three of the world’s most powerful rockets.”

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Bresnik, 58, a former test pilot and a veteran of three spaceflights, was named mission commander. The crew also includes a space record-holder, a first-time space traveller and the first European national to join an Artemis mission.

The mission will be a delicate dance in low-Earth orbit of multiple spacecraft involved in NASA’s complex Artemis programme, the flagship US effort to return people to the moon for a long-term presence. 

The programme faces competitive pressure from China, which is targeting its own 2030 crewed moon landing.

Though the two-week Artemis III mission will not approach the moon, it is seen as a key debut test of the two primary moon landers NASA will use on subsequent Artemis missions to put astronauts on the lunar surface.

SpaceX’s Starship and Blue Origin’s Blue Moon will take turns docking with NASA’s Orion, the astronaut capsule that launches off Earth atop NASA’s Space Launch System. 

The three spacecraft will test docking mechanisms and hover around each other in low-Earth orbit before returning to Earth.

Three US astronauts and a Canadian astronaut flew around the moon and back in April on NASA’s Artemis II mission, following Artemis I in 2022, a similar flight but without a crew. 

The second crewed voyage in NASA’s Artemis programme, Artemis III is the final mission planned before the space agency attempts to land astronauts on the lunar surface in 2028.

First to launch to orbit in the Artemis III mission sequence will be Blue Moon, followed by the launch of Orion carrying the astronauts, Parsons said. 

The two spacecraft will dock for about two days while the astronauts conduct tests and technology demos in Blue Moon.

Blue Moon will undock from Orion, making way for Starship, which will then attempt to dock for a day before returning to Earth.


SPACECRAFT DELAYS

SpaceX and Blue Origin have faced years of delays in the development of their landers. Last year, the companies pitched NASA on sped-up development plans that prompted a reshuffling of the agency’s Artemis programme, giving rise to the Artemis III docking mission.

The 2027 mission would require both SpaceX’s Starship and a prototype version of Blue Origin’s Blue Moon to be ready for launch at nearly the same time. SpaceX last month test-launched a new version of its Starship rocket with upgrades for moon missions.

Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket exploded on its launchpad in Florida last month as it was preparing to launch a batch of Amazon satellites. 

The explosion destroyed much of the company’s only launchpad and grounded for at least several months the rocket that Blue Origin aims to use to launch its Blue Moon lander, which is being ground-tested in Houston and Florida.

Blue Origin’s moon chief John Couluris said at the event on Tuesday that the company has made “excellent” progress on its investigation into the explosion’s cause. The company’s CEO expects New Glenn to return to the pad by the end of the year.

“We are confident that New Glenn will be ready for Artemis III,” NASA’s Parsons said on Tuesday.


BOON FOR ITALY

The inclusion of Parmitano, 49, in the Artemis mission marks a win for Italy at a politically sensitive time for NASA’s closest international partners.

Isaacman, in his reshuffling of the Artemis programme this year, canceled plans for a moon-orbiting space station called Gateway, heeding the accelerated lander development plans from SpaceX and Blue Origin and putting greater focus on building a lunar surface base instead.

The decision blindsided NASA allies that had spent years building key Gateway parts, including the European Space Agency, Canada and Japan. NASA soon after signed an agreement with Italy for help building the moon base.

Parmitano joined the ESA astronaut corps in 2009 and has flown to space twice. He is the first ESA astronaut to join an Artemis mission and the second non-US member after the Canadian Space Agency’s Jeremy Hansen flew on Artemis II.

Italian Space Agency President Teodoro Valente said in a statement that Parmitano’s selection as pilot for Artemis III “confirms and enhances the role and capabilities of the European and Italian space system in the human exploration of the universe”.

Source: Reuters/dy

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