We’re just weeks away from sending people to the moon for the first time in 53 years – Bundlezy

We’re just weeks away from sending people to the moon for the first time in 53 years

One small step for man… again (Picture: Metro)

One ticket to the moon, please. NASA has revealed the exact date that humanity will step foot once again on the lunar surface.

The US space agency said yesterday that a crew will set off for our cosmic neighbour ‘no earlier’ than February 6.

Four astronauts will do a lap around the moon before splashing down in the Pacific Ocean after 10 days.

Officials admitted, however, that given that everything from the weather to rocket performance could stop the mission, it’s more like a day between January 31 and February 14 

Artemis, NASA’s return-to-the-moon programme, has been plagued by delays, technical hiccups and budget cuts for years.

This has all but denied generations of astronauts their chance at walking where Neil Armstrong once did in 1969.

Photograph of Buzz Aldrin (1930-) an American engineer and former astronaut. As the Lunar Module Pilot on Apollo 11, he was one of the first two humans to land on the moon. Dated 20th century. (Photo by: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Buzz Aldrin was one of the first two humans to land on the moon (Picture: Universal Images Group Editorial)

The last time humans were casually strolling – or moonwalking, we suppose – on the moon was for the 1972 Apollo 17 mission.

Donald Trump made bringing American space boots back on the lunar ground a goal during his first administration, signing Artemis in 2017.

Space officials were tasked with working with commercial companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX to build a lunar-orbiting Gateway outpost.

The project’s first mission, known as Artemis I, involved an un-crewed Orion capsule doing a 1.3million mile lap around the moon in 2022.

Unlike the Apollo missions, the second Artemis mission won’t actually land on the moon.

Nevertheless, it will be the first to leave Low Earth Orbit (LEO) in 53 years.

FILE - In this photo provided by NASA, Artemis II crew members, from left, Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch, stand together at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, in front of an Orion crew module on Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023. (Kim Shiflett/NASA via AP, File)
The Artemis II crew members, from left, Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch (Picture: AP)

It will also be the first time that astronauts launch on top of NASA’s giant Space Launch System rocket and then swing around the Moon inside the Orion crew capsule.

This equipment was one of the main reasons Artemis II was postponed by more than a year, with NASA citing issues with Orion’s life support system.

The Artemis II crew will consist of three NASA astronauts – Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch – and one Canadian, Jeremy Hansen.

Astronauts won’t get a chance to set foot on the Moon until Artemis III lands on the Moon’s south pole in 2027.

China, meanwhile, plans to do the same by 2030 – complete with building a nuclear reactor to power the country’s research outpost.

What does becoming an astronaut involve?

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoffrey Swaine/Shutterstock (16223153f) The bright waning gibbous moon visible in the clear, cold mornings sky at 98.9% This intermediate Moon phase starts after the Full Moon and lasts until half of the Moon's face remains lit up at the Third Quarter. Waning Gibbous Moon, Clayfield Copse, Berkshire, UK - 04 Jan 2026
The Moon is nearly 240,000 miles away (Picture: Geoffrey Swaine/Shutterstock)

A career as an astronaut doesn’t just involve handing over a CV and cover letter to NASA.

Meganne Christian, a reserve astronaut with the European Space Agency, told Metro that spacefarers have to undergo rather oddly specific training.

‘There’s particular training for sleeping. When you have to sleep on a space station, you put yourself in a sleeping bag that’s stuck on your quarters,’ she said.

‘You just end up floating there – once you get used to it, you apparently get a really, really good night’s sleep.’

There’s even a dedicated programme to boldly go… to the toilet in space.

Your average Earthly toilet makes the most of gravity to dispose of waste, yet astronauts don’t have such a luxury up in the stars.

This means waste could freely float around the place, not only becoming an unhygienic eyesore, but also a threat to sensitive equipment.

‘It’s something you do closer to the mission,’ Christian said. ‘There is training involved as you need to be able to maintain it and fix it if something goes wrong.

‘But also just using the toilet, because it is a little different and you have to make sure you… align yourself very well.’

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