Good morning. NASA's moon missions could eventually lead to humans on Mars. |
| The rocket for the Artemis I mission, on launchpad at Kennedy Space Center.Bill Ingalls/NASA |
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Human beings will soon walk on the moon again, if NASA gets its way. |
NASA plans to launch an uncrewed spacecraft, part of the Artemis I mission, as soon as this weekend to orbit the moon and then return to Earth after about a month and a half. If everything goes as planned, a future mission could land astronauts on the moon in 2025. |
Today's newsletter will explain why NASA is doing this now and what it means for the future of space travel. |
Several factors are driving NASA to get astronauts back to the moon for the first time in more than 50 years. One is a long-running desire to get human beings on Mars. The Artemis missions will test some of the technology and logistics required to do that. |
"If you believe that the future of humanity is spreading across the solar system, the first stop has to be the moon," my colleague Ken Chang, who covers NASA, told me. "If you can't figure that out, you're certainly not getting to Mars." |
But a mission to the moon also has some scientific value on its own. Rocks collected in previous missions, for example, revealed the moon's origin: It likely formed from debris after an object the size of Mars hit Earth more than four billion years ago. |
In the Artemis missions, NASA is especially interested in studying ice in lunar craters. Depending on how long it's been there, the ice and its characteristics could provide a history of the solar system. The ice could also be used to establish permanent bases on the moon, if it can be turned into drinking water, oxygen or spacecraft fuel (as Ken explained in The Times). |
And the missions could produce collateral benefits. Past innovations in the space program have led to technological advancements in everyday life, including in computing and food preservation. |
This weekend's launch was originally scheduled for this past Monday, but NASA postponed it after finding a technical problem shortly before takeoff. It could be delayed again, possibly for months, if the weather is bad or if another problem arises. |
But once the first Artemis mission does launch, NASA aims to follow it with more trips to the moon. Artemis II, currently set for 2024, would be crewed and fly around the moon. Artemis III, planned for 2025, would land a woman and a person of color on the moon for the first time. (The Times broke down the Artemis missions, with graphics, here.) |
If all of that goes well, NASA hopes to build permanent outposts on the moon and in its orbit for future lunar exploration and beyond. |
The first Artemis mission would add to what's been a busy 2022 for NASA. Earlier this year, the agency also deployed the James Webb telescope, which is already producing detailed and colorful photos of our solar system and deep space. |
Some of that is coincidental timing. After the space shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, the agency began to work on new modes of travel. The next year, it started construction on the James Webb telescope. Nearly two decades later, both projects happened to be ready around the same time. |
But NASA has been galvanized by competition from other countries. China, for instance, has landed three robotic missions on the moon. "We have to be concerned that they would say: 'This is our exclusive zone. You stay out,'" Bill Nelson, the NASA administrator, told The Times. "So, yes, that's one of the things that we look at." |
The agency has also been pushed by private companies, like Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin, that aim to turn space travel into a commercial enterprise. The private actors have gotten a lot of support and funding from NASA, but they have also driven higher interest in space travel, from the public and private sectors, that wasn't there before. After years of cuts, NASA's budget has grown for most of the past decade. |
Some critics are unhappy with the Artemis missions' price tag. By the time people walk on the moon again, NASA will have likely spent around $100 billion. (NASA's budget makes up about 0.5 percent of federal spending.) The cost led the Obama administration to cancel an earlier version of the project. |
That spending, however, is one of the reasons Artemis has survived: Members of Congress who oversee NASA's budget, particularly in Texas, Alabama and Florida, have made sure the agency's projects end up in their states. That's pushed lawmakers to keep the program going. |
The Economist argued that NASA should aim to be more efficient, similar to private space exploration businesses. It compared the cost of the Artemis rockets to SpaceX's, which are cheaper, and, unlike NASA's rockets, reusable. |
NASA does plan to partner with SpaceX for a critical component of the Artemis III mission: The company's Starship will bring astronauts to the moon's surface. But, for now, NASA is mostly working with the technology it has developed and knows can work. |
| Mary Peltola at a campaign event on Tuesday.Ash Adams for The New York Times |
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| Russian conscripts in Omsk, Russia, in June.Alexey Malgavko/Reuters |
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What is school for? Making good citizens, Heather McGhee and Victor Ray argue. Wasting time and money, says Bryan Caplan. Read the series here. |
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Lives Lived: Once a teenage antiques dealer scouring junk shops, Robert Kime become one of Britain's pre-eminent interior decorators. He died at 76. |
| SPORTS NEWS FROM THE ATHLETIC |
| Serena Williams will face Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times |
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An icon turns back the clock: Serena Williams upset world No. 2 Anett Kontaveit with a vintage performance last night at the US Open. (Stars were on hand.) Williams is a stunning 42-0 in first- and second-round matches at the tournament. Next up: Williams plays doubles with her sister Venus today before facing Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round Friday. |
Is a 12-team College Football Playoff coming? C.F.P. expansion talks are "trending in the right direction" with the presidents and chancellors who make up the sport's top governing body scheduled to meet remotely Friday. |
Don't look now: The Baltimore Orioles are two games out of a playoff spot and just brought in reinforcements. Top prospect Gunnar Henderson homered last night in his debut, veteran first baseman Jesús Aguilar is back and rookie Adley Rutschman is already a star. September intrigue? Check. |
| Michael Schultz is still directing at 83.Nathan Bajar for The New York Times |
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When Michael Schultz began directing his first film, in 1971, there was no road map for a lengthy career as a Black director in Hollywood. The first studio movie with a Black director had come out only two years earlier. So Schultz found his own path, and more than 50 years later he's still going, Reggie Ugwu writes in The Times. |
Though he never made a Hollywood blockbuster, Schultz has directed more than a dozen movies, including the underground classics "Cooley High" and "Car Wash." He is responsible for the first feature-film appearances of Denzel Washington, Samuel L. Jackson and Blair Underwood. And he continues to work at 83, now directing TV. "I'll retire when either my body gives out or it starts to feel like work," he said. "But, right now, I'm having fun — and they're still paying me." |
| Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. |
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The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was etymology. Here is today's puzzle. |
Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — German |
Correction: A chart in yesterday's newsletter about Covid risk was mislabeled. The labels for "Moderate" and "Liberal" groups were transposed, as were the ones for "Slightly liberal" and "Very conservative." |
"The Daily" is about Mikhail Gorbachev. On "Popcast," what a virtual rapper and "fake" Spotify artists mean for music. |
Matthew Cullen, Natasha Frost, Lauren Hard, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. |
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