The Daily Broadcast: Artemis III Takes Shape: NASA’s Ambitious LEO Test Before the Moon

Artemis III Shifts Strategy with Commercial Lander Integration in Earth Orbit

Spacer fabrication at Marshall Space Flight Center

NASA’s Artemis programme is undergoing a significant reshape. Rather than launching directly toward the Moon, the agency is inserting Artemis III as a dedicated Earth orbit test mission scheduled for 2027—a move that prioritises risk reduction and systems integration ahead of the first crewed lunar landing.

The mission marks a watershed moment for NASA’s approach to human spaceflight. For the first time, the agency will coordinate a launch campaign integrating multiple human-rated vehicles from competing commercial partners: Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mark 2 and SpaceX’s Starship Human Landing System, alongside NASA’s Orion spacecraft. The crew of four will conduct rendezvous, docking, and proximity operations in low Earth orbit, testing crew transfer procedures and evaluating lander habitability before committing astronauts to the lunar surface.

The Space Launch System will deliver Orion into an initial suborbital trajectory, but the vehicle will omit the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage. Instead, engineers at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama are fabricating a non-propulsive “spacer”—a structural element that mimics the mass and interface properties of the ICPS. The European Space Agency’s Service Module will then perform orbital burns to reach stable low Earth orbit, where the complex choreography of rendezvous and transfer will unfold.

By conducting these demonstrations in Earth orbit rather than committing to the lunar environment immediately, NASA gains flexibility in launch windows and reduces technical exposure. Solid Rocket Booster segments are already arriving at Kennedy Space Center from Utah, and stacking on Mobile Launcher 1 inside the Vehicle Assembly Building is expected to begin this summer. The mission also provides an early opportunity to validate an upgraded Orion heat shield design and test revised reentry trajectories that could expand the operational envelope for future flights. Overall, this represents NASA’s deliberate pivot toward integrated, choreographed exploration rather than single-point demonstrations.

Space Policy Week: Starship V3 Launch, Budget Surge, and Industry Convergence

Starship V3 on the launch pad

This week brings a convergence of significant space industry and policy milestones. SpaceX is poised to launch Starship Integrated Flight Test-12 (IFT-12)—the first flight of the company’s third-generation vehicle. The launch window opens at 6:30 pm Eastern Time on Wednesday, May 20, from Starbase in Texas. The V3 variant features substantial upgrades to the Raptor engine suite, and the flight will also mark the first launch from SpaceX’s new pad at Starbase. For this inaugural V3 mission, the booster will splashdown in the Gulf rather than attempt the now-routine “chopstick” catch at the launch tower.

On Capitol Hill, the House Armed Services Committee will hold a hearing the same day on the Department of the Air Force’s FY2027 budget request. A striking figure dominates the discussion: the U.S. Space Force budget is set to nearly double—from approximately $40 billion in FY2026 to $71 billion in FY2027. The Department of Defence overall is requesting a record $1.5 trillion. Secretary of the Air Force Troy Meink, Air Force Chief of Staff General Kenneth Wilsbach, and Space Force Chief of Space Operations General Chance Saltzman will testify. Although $12 billion of the requested $71 billion is envisioned to come from a later reconciliation bill, uncertainty remains about that portion’s passage.

Meanwhile, industry will gather at the ASCEND conference (Accelerating Space Commerce, Exploration, and New Discovery) in Washington, DC, from Tuesday through Thursday. AIAA is co-hosting with the International Space Station National Lab, the Commercial Space Federation, and others in what marks a turning point for the conference—its first year in Washington rather than Las Vegas. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman will kick off the event at 8:00 am on Tuesday with remarks to hundreds of industry, government, and academic participants.

Later in the week, the Secure World Foundation and the Centre for Strategic and International Studies will jointly discuss their complementary reports on counterspace threats on Friday afternoon. SWF’s latest assessment adds Germany to the list of countries pursuing counterspace capabilities, while emphasizing that “only non-destructive capabilities are actively being used against satellites in military operations” so far.

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Robo Chris is a collection of API calls, filters, and searches - bolted together with magic and love. He preforms instructed information gathering, and does a fair bit of writing too. Everything he creates gets submitted to our editor-in-chief, actual Chris, for approval and publication!

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