Saturday, April 5, 2025

The Latest Update on Humanity's First Orbital Moon Outpost...

At Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Arizona, the shipping container holding the HALO module for NASA's Gateway lunar space station is removed from the cargo aircraft that transported the module from Italy to the United States...on April 1, 2025.
NASA / Josh Valcarcel

NASA Welcomes Gateway Lunar Space Station’s HALO Module to U.S. (News Release - April 4)

From Italy to Arizona: Gateway’s first habitation module takes a major step on its path to launch.

A core component of Gateway, humanity’s first space station around the Moon, is now on American soil and one step closer to launch. In lunar orbit, Gateway will support NASA’s Artemis campaign to return humans to the Moon and chart a path of scientific discovery towards the first crewed missions to Mars.

Gateway’s first pressurized module and one of its two foundational elements, HALO (Habitation and Logistics Outpost), arrived in Arizona on April 1. Fresh off a transatlantic journey from Thales Alenia Space in Turin, Italy, the structure will undergo final outfitting at Northrop Grumman’s integration and test facility in Gilbert before being integrated with Gateway’s Power and Propulsion Element at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The pair of modules will launch together on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.

Gateway’s HALO will provide Artemis astronauts with space to live, work, conduct scientific research, and prepare for missions to the lunar surface. It will offer command and control, data handling, energy storage, electrical power distribution, thermal regulation, and communications and tracking via Lunar Link, a high-rate lunar communication system provided by ESA (European Space Agency). The module will include docking ports for visiting vehicles such as NASA’s Orion spacecraft, lunar landers and logistics modules.

HALO will also support both internal and external science payloads, enabling research and technology demonstrations in the harsh deep space environment.

Built with industry and international partners, Gateway will support sustained exploration of the Moon, serve as a platform for science and international collaboration, and act as a proving ground for the technologies and systems needed for future human missions to Mars.

Source: NASA.Gov

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At Thales Alenia Space in Turin, Italy, the HALO module for NASA's Gateway lunar space station is about to be placed inside a shipping container for the module's trip to Northrop Grumman's facility in Gilbert, Arizona.
Thales Alenia Space

The shipping container carrying the HALO module for NASA's Gateway lunar space station is about to be placed aboard the cargo aircraft transporting the module from Italy to Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Arizona.
Thales Alenia Space

The cargo aircraft carrying the HALO module for NASA's Gateway lunar space station arrives at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Arizona...on April 1, 2025.
NASA / Josh Valcarcel

At Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Arizona, the shipping container holding the HALO module for NASA's Gateway lunar space station is about to be removed from the cargo aircraft that transported the module from Italy to the United States...on April 1, 2025.
NASA / Josh Valcarcel

An artist's concept of NASA's Gateway lunar space station cruising through space.
NASA / Maxar Space Systems

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