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Could scrapping our return to the Moon help us get to Mars faster ?

January 29, 2025 · Comment icon 4 comments
Intuitive Machines Moon Racer.
What would happen if we delayed or canceled our return to the Moon ? Image Credit: Intuitive Machines
The Moon is seen as a 'stepping stone' to sending humans to Mars - but could we realistically skip it ?
Ian Whittaker: The Artemis program has been Nasa's best chance to get "boots on the Moon" again. But with the new US administration taking guidance from tech entrepreneur Elon Musk, who is focused on Mars colonisation, will they end up abandoning or pushing back lunar missions?

For example, there's been speculation that returning US president Donald Trump may cancel the Space Launch System rocket, which Nasa intended to use to get from the Moon to Mars. But is this approach likely to help them get to Mars quicker?

The last human presence on the lunar surface was Apollo 17 in 1972. So you may imagine that it should be easy for the US to return. However there have been plans to once again send people there since 2004, which have changed name with each incoming president, until its current incarnation as the Artemis program.

The 2022 Artemis-1 test flight was successful in its mission to send an unmanned satellite around the lunar orbit and return using the new SLS rocket system. But Artemis-2, which will carry crew, is not scheduled for launch until 2026. When we consider private companies and other nations, this is comparatively slow progress.

The first successful landing of a spacecraft on the Moon by the Indian Space Agency, Isro, took place in 2023 with Chaandrayan-3, which was an amazing achievement with a low budget. China landed in 2013 with Chang'e 3, and Chang'e 4 in 2019 on the dark side.

Russia have previously had landers on the Moon. Their more recent attempt at a lunar landing with Luna-25 was unsuccessful though. There are also future lander missions planned by the European Space Agency with Argonaut, a private Israeli company and other private industries. Clearly, there is no shortage of potential competitors which could eventually develop to send humans too.

Implications for Mars

So would turning to Martian exploration be a sensible move instead of heading for the Moon? It would likely mean abandoning the Lunar Gateway project, a space station in orbit around the Moon where astronauts could live. But as this is not planned until 2027 at the earliest, this would seem acceptable.

However the difference between going to the Moon and going to Mars is like the difference between walking to the end of your road compared to walking to another country.

Besides the incredible difference in distance (the distance to travel to Mars is 833 times greater than that of the distance to the Moon), the time taken to get there is far longer as well. The optimal lunar launch conditions repeat once a month. And you could still launch at times that are not ideal.

The optimal fuel route for Mars involves arriving when the two planets are roughly on opposite sides of the Sun. This launch window repeats every 18 months, and the journey time of nine months means any problems onboard will need to be fixed by the crew, with no rescue option. Faster routes can be achieved (roughly six months) but this then becomes very energy intensive.

This is why the lunar gateway would come in handy, allowing astronauts to take off from the Moon, away from the Earth's immense gravity, and head to Mars from there. Of course the material for the gateway would need to be sent to the lunar gateway first. But by splitting the energy requirements up it means slower but more efficient propulsion methods can be used for part of the Mars journey.

There is no doubt that, with some work, SpaceX will be able to make a landing on Mars. But will they be able to safely take people there and get them back? As a company the idea of profit will be a strong factor, along with astronaut safety. We only have to look at some of the more recent Boeing problems (astronauts have been stuck on the International Space Station for seven months at time of writing) to see that private companies may want to slow down a bit when it comes to transporting people.
This is unlikely to happen though, with the considerable influence of Musk on the White House administration, and the suggestion of fellow billionaire Jared Isaacman (a private astronaut) as the new head of Nasa.

Critical decisions

So two options for Nasa to choose from: either keep going with their Artemis program and abandon the Lunar Gateway, or aim for Mars and be primarily dependent on Musk.

Funding both options will likely mean that neither ever happens. Of course, the Mars mission would be easier if the gateway was already present at the Moon.

The timelines involved here are important. SpaceX states that it will send five uncrewed Starships to Mars next year with an aim to send humans to Mars in 2028. This seems ambitious, particularly as it involves refuelling in orbit, but if additional funds and material are put towards the project it could potentially be sooner than this.

As the lunar gateway would be built at the earliest in 2027, then it'd be unlikely to be operational in 2028 anyway. So prioritising Mars exploration over the lunar gateway may indeed get us to Mars quicker - but it will be risky.

If the US pulls out of plans to explore the Moon, other nations can expand their presence in those areas more easily - with the potential to have an easier route to launch to Mars. These are likely to be on much longer time scales though, but if Musk fails to get humans to Mars in the next few years, these countries may have an edge.

The conditions on Mars are slightly more favourable for human presence, with at least some atmospheric pressure and the potential for mining water. But as many studies have shown, it has no potential for terraforming, the process of altering a planet to make it more habitable for humans.

The increased distance from the Sun also means that solar panels are slightly less effective, and Mars is not rich in deposited solar Helium-3, which can be used as a fuel for nuclear fusion.

Of course the challenge is what excites many people and it may be a risk worth taking. But this decision should be left with the experts in the field, rather than politicians and billionaires.

Ian Whittaker, Senior Lecturer in Physics, Nottingham Trent University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (4)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #1 Posted by Ell 19 days ago
As I read it, Musk will put humans on Mars around 2029. Personally I would prefer sending lots of robots to Mars, not humans. Maybe send humans to Phobos and Deimos instead?
Comment icon #2 Posted by esoteric_toad 19 days ago
Mars is a LONG way off regardless of what Musk, Bezos or NASA says. The moon would be a perfect practice run. While space travel will always be dangerous and risky I will predict that IF we attempt to go to Mars and there is loss of life it will end that for a VERY long time. The moon is 3 days away so there would always (providing the provisions are made in advance) be a chance of rescue  or emergency resources.
Comment icon #3 Posted by Nicolette 14 days ago
I thought it had been planned before to use the moon as a cost efficient staging area. Did they decide to skip it? Does seem kind of weird that it's so doable to keep a station in orbit but not go put one on solid ground. Feels like they could be building a place instead of floating around, and like a lot could be learned and accomplished by achieving a station on the moon first.
Comment icon #4 Posted by Hammerclaw 14 days ago
Going to Mars isn't one-off missions like going to the moon. Mars is much too far for that. We don't live in large numbers in the Australian outback or the Sahara Desert or Death Valley, but Mars makes those places look like paradise in comparison. Yet, the goal is going there to stay. We have to take our best game to Mars, because failure means certain death.


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