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Nasa's return to the Moon: Thomas Pesquet believes he has "a voice" to apply

2022-08-29T07:27:57.312Z


A seasoned astronaut, Frenchman Thomas Pesquet believes he can apply in the same way as "several" European astronauts for the Artemis 3 mission in 2025.


French astronaut Thomas Pesquet “

will watch with great attention

” the next manned flights of the Artemis mission to the Moon, believing he has “

a voice in the chapter

” to apply, in the same way as “

several

” European astronauts, a- he said on Monday August 29 on France Info.

NASA's new rocket is due to take off Monday from Florida for the moon, for the first time in 50 years.

The Orion capsule, tested without a crew, will be propelled into orbit around the Moon, in order to verify that the vehicle is safe to embark astronauts.

Read alsoMission Artemis: “Message to Beijing”

Asked if he had a chance of taking off for the Moon during the next mission, Thomas Pesquet replied “

the 2 no, but from the 3, Europe will have a say in the matter

”.

Artemis 2 will carry astronauts to the Moon in 2024, without landing there.

An honor reserved for the crew of Artemis 3, in 2025 at the earliest.

NASA then wants to launch about one mission per year.

We will have flights for European astronauts, clearly me and my colleagues will watch this very carefully and then we will imagine ourselves in this capsule

”, he said.

Among the European astronauts, "

we are a few to have a say

" to "

apply

", but "

it will depend on the director general of the ESA

(the European Space Agency, editor's note)

, on the member countries, we will see

", he added.

"

What's good is that there will be several missions (...), we have a program that will be sustainable using the resources on the Moon, and that means that there is no will not have a European astronaut

", but "

in ten years, there will be several

", he added.

Read alsoArtemis: Europe provides an essential module for the survival of astronauts

The Moon, "

it's a little bit the Grail today, and tomorrow it will be Mars

", explained Thomas Pesquet, noting that "

if we could go directly to Mars, (...) we would do it

" because "

the scientific interest is greater

”.

But we are not in a position to go there

” and “

we have to go and rehearse our ranges on the Moon

”.

Source: lefigaro

All tech articles on 2022-08-29

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