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Toute l’actualité du programme Artemis de la NASA, la tentative de l’agence de ramener des humains sur la Lune

Les humains n'ont pas mis les pieds sur la Lune depuis la mission Apollo 17 de la NASA en 1972. Désormais, l'agence spatiale se précipite pour revenir sur la surface lunaire sous l'égide de son programme Artemis – un clin d'œil à la déesse grecque et sœur jumelle d'Apollo, dont...

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Toute l’actualité du programme Artemis de la NASA, la tentative de l’agence de ramener des humains sur la Lune

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Image of the NASA logo on the outside of Orion
In this handout image provided by NASA, Orion snapped this high-resolution selfie in space with a camera mounted on one of its solar array wings during a routine external inspection of the spacecraft on the second day into the Artemis II mission on April 3, 2026. | NASA via Getty Images

Humans haven’t stepped foot on the Moon since NASA’s Apollo 17 mission in 1972. Now, the space agency is racing to get back to the lunar surface under the umbrella of its Artemis program — a nod to the Greek goddess and twin sister of Apollo, whose name was given to NASA’s first program to send humans to the Moon. 

It won’t be easy. The program has been plagued by years of delays, development mishaps, and billions of dollars in budget overruns. But the mission is unquestionably ambitious. The goal of Artemis is to create a sustainable presence near the Moon, instead of just sending humans to plant flags and make footprints. The agency also aims to send the first woman to the Moon through the Artemis program.

Artemis I successfully completed its uncrewed mission in 2022. On April 2nd, 2026, Artemis II launched from Kennedy Space Station carrying four astronauts in its Orion capsule. The plan is to travel around the Moon before returning to Earth in 10 days’ time. They’ll be testing out the hardware and systems that could soon see humans standing on the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years in the Artemis IV mission scheduled for 2028.

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