'We're pushing the limits:' Artemis 2 backup astronaut on 2025 round-the-moon mission (exclusive)

Artemis 2 is making progress towards its lunar liftoff, but a newly named backup astronaut notes there is “always something new” to learn in developmental missions.

Developmental efforts like Artemis 2, a round-the-moon mission set for September 2025, always put safety before schedules. While this will be the first crewed flight to the moon since Apollo 17 in 1972, backup NASA astronaut Andre Douglas told Space.com that no spaceflight is truly operational — even crewed rotation missions to the International Space Station that happen every few months.

“If you think about the thousands and millions of components in these systems, right, both spacecraft and ground systems, there’s a high probability that something’s going to change, and that can ripple down and cause any sort of delay or retest,” Douglas said. 

NASA astronaut Andre Douglas wears AR (Augmented Reality) display technology during an advanced technology run in the San Francisco Volcanic Field in Northern Arizona on May 21, 2024. (Image credit: NASA/Josh Valcarce)

Pointing to delays that often arise in developmental missions, he added: “We’re pushing the limits of what we know, and our talent. It is never, never that simple. So I think things are always being developed.”

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