More than fifty years after the end of the Apollo program, NASA plans to return to the Moon, with a woman on-board
Who will take the giant leap for womankind? More than fifty years after the end of the Apollo program, NASA plans to return to the Moon by 2024 as a “proving ground” to test the next generation of spacecraft ahead of an eventual crewed mission to Mars.
The new program has been named ‘Artemis’ after Apollo’s twin-sister in Greek mythology. The space agency has said that the mission will see the first woman to stride the lunar surface.
So, who will she be? No one knows for sure, but it’s a likely bet the candidate will be selected from among NASA’s current roster of 12 female astronauts.
They’re aged between 40 and 53, and are former military pilots, medical doctors and scientists who were picked from among thousands of applicants since the late 1990s.
The one who can join Neil Armstrong in the annals of history isn’t an exact science, but several former astronauts and experts interviewed by AFP say the proximity of the deadline mean it probably won’t be a new recruit. The objective will be easier than ever before because there have never been so many women astronauts.
When NASA was first established in 1958 it only recruited from the military, which was at the time exclusively male.
All 12 moonwalkers between 1969 and 1972 were men, and it wasn’t until 1983 that Sally Ride became the first American woman sent to space.
The four women of the 21st class of astronauts, recruited in 2013, represent a good mix of youth and experience. Currently between the ages of 40 and 41, they will all have made their first space forays between now and 2020.
Anne McClain, an ex-army helicopter pilot, will be in the International Space Station (ISS) until the end of June. Currently in the ISS Christina Koch, an engineer and passionate mountain climber. She will soon beat the record for the longest time a woman has been in space, at 11 months.
Back in March, the pair almost conducted the first all-female spacewalk, but a lack of a proper fitting spacesuit meant McClain had to give her place up for her male colleague Nick Hague.
Christina Koch or Anne McClain would likely be two top picks. Their two female colleagues from the same class, Jessica Meir, a marine biologist who specialises in penguins and geese, and former F/A 18 fighter pilot Nicole Mann, who flew in Iraq and Afghanistan, are also highly qualified. They are both in the middle of their training to go to the ISS.
In a 2016 interview, all four declared themselves ready to go to Mars if the opportunity presented itself. It is hard to imagine them turning down a trip to the Moon. There’s no upper age limit for space. There’s nothing therefore excluding the highly experienced Sunita Williams, who is preparing for her third space mission and will be 58 in 2024. “Suni,” as she’s fondly addressed, has piloted about thirty different aircraft in her military career.
Two other women, Serena Aunon-Chancellor and Kate Rubins have also flown to space recently. The other five haven’t flown since 2010 but remain on active duty. There are five women in the 2017 batch, but they have yet to complete their initial training.
They’re not ruled out yet. In Houston, the chief astronaut will be keen to build a team whose profiles will be complementary, a mix of ex-military and scientific backgrounds, and of different personalities
The mission foresees a four-member crew, two of whom will walk the Moon.