
The Artemis era truly kicked off Friday evening when a gleaming spacecraft that had journeyed 700,000 miles around the Moon, carrying four astronauts, splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off California.
For NASA, its international partners, and humanity as a whole, the successful completion of Artemis II signaled our species’ return to deep space after more than half a century.
It was a remarkable achievement, and NASA deserves credit for making an extraordinarily difficult task look comparatively straightforward. Yet it also raises a key question: what comes next?
NASA recently adjusted its plans for Artemis III and IV to insert a stepping-stone mission before attempting a crewed lunar landing. Considerable additional work is required to make those flights happen. To be blunt, the Artemis II mission that ended Friday was the lowest-hanging fruit of the Artemis program.
“The work ahead is greater than the work behind us,” said Amit Kshatriya, NASA’s associate administrator, after Friday night’s landing.
The next phase calls for more complex operations, involving multiple vehicles and ultimately a descent to another celestial body. To meet its objectives, NASA will need to remove the training wheels. Below is the status of the major elements that must come together to land humans on the Moon.
Space Launch System
Several NASA officials praised the Space Launch System’s performance during the April 1 Artemis II launch, saying it hit the mission’s target orbit with better than 99 percent accuracy.
The core stage for Artemis III is expected to depart the Michoud, Louisiana factory later this month for delivery to Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Other rocket components have already arrived or will do so soon.
Meanwhile, the Mobile Launch Tower sustained moderate damage and will be returned to the Vehicle Assembly Building in Florida for refurbishment and subsequent stacking operations for the next mission.








